Vehicle component control methods and systems

ABSTRACT

Control system for controlling at least one part of a vehicle includes a plurality of sensor systems mounted at different locations on the vehicle, each sensor system providing a measurement related to a state thereof system or a measurement related to a state of the mounting location. A processor is coupled to the sensor systems and diagnoses the state of the vehicle itself and optionally its dynamic motion based on the measurements of the sensor systems. The processor controls each part based at least in part on the diagnosed state of the vehicle.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS/INCORPORATION BY REFERENCE

The present application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/464,841, filed May 4, 2012, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 9,008,854 on Apr. 14, 2015, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/034,779 filed Feb. 21, 2008, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 8,229,624 on Jul. 24, 2012, which is:

1. a continuation-in-part (CIP) of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/331,060 filed Dec. 27, 2002, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,635,043 on Dec. 22, 2009, which is a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/188,673 filed Jul. 3, 2002, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,738,697 on May 18, 2004, which is:

-   -   A. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/753,186 filed Jan. 2,         2001, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,484,080 on Nov. 19, 2002; and     -   B. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/174,709 filed Jun. 19,         2002, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,735,506 on May 11, 2004, which         is a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/753,186 filed Jan. 2,         2001, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,484,080 on Nov. 19, 2002;

2. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/940,881 filed Sep. 13, 2004, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,663,502 on Feb. 16, 2010, which is:

-   -   A. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/613,453 filed Jul. 3,         2003, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,850,824 on Feb. 1, 2005, which         is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/188,673 filed         Jul. 3, 2002, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,738,697 on May 18, 2004,         the history of which is set forth above; and     -   B. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/805,903 filed Mar. 22,         2004, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,050,897 on May 23, 2006, which         is:         -   1. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/174,709, filed Jun.             19, 2002, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,735,506, issued May 11,             2004, the history of which is set forth above; and         -   2. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/188,673, filed Jul.             3, 2002, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,738,697 issued May 18,             2004, the history of which is set forth above;     -   C. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/931,288 filed Aug. 31,         2004, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,164,117 on Jan. 16, 2007;

3. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/082,739 filed Mar. 17, 2005, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,421,321 on Sep. 2, 2008, which is a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/701,361 filed Nov. 4, 2003, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,988,026 on Jan. 17, 2006, which is:

-   -   A. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/174,709 filed Jun. 19,         2002, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,735,506 on May 11, 2004, the         history of which is set forth above;     -   B. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/183,673 filed Jul. 3,         2002, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,738,697 on May 18, 2004, the         history of which is set forth above;     -   C. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/330,938 filed Dec. 27,         2002, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,823,244 on Nov. 23, 2004;     -   D. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/638,743 filed Aug. 11,         2003, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,284,769 on Oct. 23, 2007, which         is:         -   1) a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/188,673 filed Jul.             3, 2002, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,738,697 on May 18, 2004,             the history of which is set forth above; and         -   2) a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/330,938 filed Dec.             27, 2002, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,823,244 on Nov. 23,             2004; and     -   E. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/613,453 filed Jul. 3,         2003, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,850,824 on Feb. 1, 2005, the         history of which is set forth above;

4. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/131,623 filed May 18, 2005, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,481,453 on Jan. 27, 2009, which is a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/638,743 filed Aug. 11, 2003, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,284,769 on Oct. 23, 2007, the history of which is set forth above; and

5. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/833,033 filed Aug. 2, 2007, now abandoned, which is a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/638,743 filed Aug. 11, 2003, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,284,769 on Oct. 23, 2007, the history of which is set forth above; and

6. a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/833,052 filed Aug. 2, 2007, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 8,060,282 on Nov. 15, 2011, which is a CIP of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/638,743 filed Aug. 11, 2003, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,284,769 on Oct. 23, 2007, the history of which is set forth above.

This application is related to U.S. application Ser. No. 09/137,918 filed Aug. 20, 1998, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,175,787 on Jan. 16, 2001, U.S. application Ser. No. 08/476,077 filed Jun. 7, 1995, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 5,809,437 on Sep. 15, 1998, U.S. application Ser. No. 10/822,445 filed Apr. 12, 2004, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,085,637 on Aug. 1, 2006, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/028,386 filed Jan. 3, 2005, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,110,880 on Sep. 19, 2006, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/034,325 filed Jan. 12, 2005, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,202,776 on Apr. 10, 2007, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/039,129 filed Jan. 19, 2005, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,082,359 on Jul. 25, 2006, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/120,065 filed May 2, 2005, now abandoned, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/220,139 filed Sep. 6, 2005, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,103,460 on Sep. 5, 2006, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/278,188 filed Mar. 31, 2006, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,313,467 on Dec. 25, 2007, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/278,979 filed Apr. 7, 2006, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,386,372 on Jun. 10, 2008, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/421,500 filed Jun. 1, 2006, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,672,756 on Mar. 2, 2010, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/422,240 filed Jun. 5, 2006, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,630,802 on Dec. 8, 2009, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/423,521 filed Jun. 12, 2006, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,523,803 on Apr. 28, 2009, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/428,498 filed Jul. 3, 2006, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,880,594 on Feb. 1, 2011, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/457,231 filed Jul. 13, 2006, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,760,080 on Jul. 20, 2010, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/461,473 filed Aug. 1, 2006, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,786,864 on Aug. 31, 2010, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/464,288 filed Aug. 14, 2006, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,650,210 on Jan. 4, 2007, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/470,061 filed Sep. 5, 2006, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,527,288 on May 5, 2009, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/558,314 filed Nov. 9, 2006, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,831,358 on Nov. 9, 2010, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/562,730 filed Nov. 22, 2006, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,295,925 on Nov. 13, 2007, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/565,020 filed Nov. 30, 2006, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/620,800 filed Jan. 8, 2007, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/677,664 filed Feb. 22, 2007, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,693,636 on Apr. 6, 2010, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/677,858 filed Feb. 22, 2007, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,889,096 on Feb. 15, 2011, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/681,834 filed Mar. 5, 2007, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 8,169,311 on May 1, 2012, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/755,881 filed May 31, 2007, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/832,870 filed Aug. 2, 2007, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 8,019,501 on Sep. 13, 2011, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/836,274 tiled Aug. 9, 2007, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 8,036,788 on Oct. 11, 2011, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/836,341 filed Aug. 9, 2007, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/928,763 filed Oct. 30, 2007, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,603,894 on Oct. 20, 2009, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/930,590 filed Oct. 31, 2007, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/930,954 filed Oct. 31, 2007, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 8,024,084 on Sep. 20, 2011, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/938,630 filed Nov. 12, 2007, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,648,164 on Jan. 19, 2010, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/939,183 filed Nov. 13, 2007, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 8,346,438 on Jan. 1, 2013, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/940,428 filed Nov. 15, 2007, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,444,210 on Oct. 28, 2008, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/940,669 filed Nov. 15, 2007, U.S. application Ser. No. 11/942,044 filed Nov. 19, 2007, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,555,370 on Jun. 30, 2009.

The above-identified applications are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.

All of the references, patents and patent applications that are referred to herein and in the parent applications are incorporated by reference in their entirety as if they had each been set forth herein in frill. Note that this application is one in a series of applications covering safety and other—systems for vehicles and other uses. The disclosure herein goes beyond that needed to support the claims of the particular invention set forth herein. This is not to be construed that the inventor is releasing the unclaimed disclosure and subject matter into the public domain. Rather, it is intended that patent applications have been or will be filed to cover all of the subject matter disclosed below and in the current assignee's granted patents and pending applications. Also please note that the terms frequently used below “the invention” or “this invention” is not meant to be construed that there is only one invention being discussed. Instead, when the terms “the invention” or “this invention” are used, it is referring to the particular invention being discussed in the paragraph where the term is used.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates generally to methods and systems for controlling components in a vehicle based on the stability of the vehicle.

There are numerous apparatus, systems and methods described and disclosed herein. Many combinations of these are described but in order to conserve space the inventor has not described all combinations and permutations of these apparatus, systems and methods, however, the inventor intends that each and every such combination and permutation is an invention to be considered disclosed by this disclosure. The inventor further intends to file divisional, continuation and continuation-in-part applications to cover many of these combinations and permutations, if necessary.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

A detailed background of the invention is found in the parent applications, e.g., U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/476,077 and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/753,186, incorporated by reference herein.

OBJECTS AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

It is an object of the present invention to provide new and improved methods and systems for controlling components in a vehicle based on the stability of the vehicle.

In order to achieve this object and others, a control system for controlling at least one part of a vehicle in accordance with the invention includes a plurality of sensor systems mounted at different locations on the vehicle, each sensor system providing a measurement related to a state thereof system or a measurement related to a state of the mounting location, and a processor coupled to the sensor systems and arranged to diagnose the state of the vehicle itself, and optionally its dynamic motion, based on the measurements of die sensor systems. The processor is arranged to control the part(s) based at least in part on the diagnosed state of the vehicle.

The state of the vehicle diagnosed by the processor may be, include or be derived from angular motion of the vehicle and/or angular acceleration. In the latter case, one or more of the sensor systems may be an accelerometer such that the processor determines the angular acceleration of the vehicle based on the acceleration measured by the accelerometer(s). Also, in the latter case, angular velocity and angular position or orientation is derivable from the angular acceleration. Thus, when a navigation system is being controlled, the processor can control it based on the angular acceleration of the vehicle.

The controlled part may be a steering system, a braking system or a throttle system, all of which can be controlled to in an attempt to maintain stability of the vehicle. Also, the controlled part may be an occupant restraint device which is controlled in an attempt to minimize injury to an occupant.

The processor may include a pattern recognition system for diagnosing the state of the vehicle. A display may be coupled to the processor for displaying an indication of the state of the vehicle as diagnosed by the processor, i.e., to a vehicle occupant. Similarly, a warning device may be coupled to the processor for relaying a warning to an occupant of the vehicle relating to the state of the vehicle as diagnosed by the processor. On the other hand, the diagnosis of the state of the vehicle can be transmitted to a remote site by a transmission or communications device coupled to the processor, which transmits a signal to the remote site relating to the state of the vehicle as diagnosed by the processor.

The sensor systems may be mounted separate and apart from the part being controlled by the processor.

A method for controlling at least one part of the vehicle in accordance with the invention includes mounting a plurality of sensor systems at different locations on the vehicle, measuring a state of the sensor system or a state of the respective mounting location of the sensor system, diagnosing the state of the vehicle based on the measurements of the state of the sensor systems or the state of the mounting locations of the sensor systems, and controlling the part(s) based at least in part on the diagnosed state of the vehicle. The state of the sensor system may be, include or be derived from the acceleration, angular acceleration, angular velocity or angular orientation of the sensor system.

Diagnosis of the state of the vehicle may entail determining whether the vehicle is about to rollover, crash or skid.

In some embodiments, an indication of the state of the vehicle is displayed to an occupant of the vehicle, a warning is relayed to an occupant of the vehicle relating to the state of the vehicle, and/or a signal is transmitted to a remote site relating to the state of the vehicle.

When the sensor systems include one or more accelerometers, diagnosis of the state of the vehicle may include determining angular acceleration of the vehicle based on the acceleration measured by the accelerometers. Angular velocity and angular position or orientation is derivable from the angular acceleration. As such, when the controlled part is a navigation system, it can be controlled based on the angular acceleration of the vehicle.

As used herein, a diagnosis of the “state of the vehicle” may mean a diagnosis of the condition of the vehicle with respect to its stability and proper running and operating condition. Thus, the state of the vehicle could be normal when the vehicle is operating properly on a highway or abnormal when, for example, the vehicle is experiencing excessive angular inclination (e.g., two wheels are off the ground and the vehicle is about to rollover), the vehicle is experiencing a crash, the vehicle is skidding, and other similar situations. A diagnosis of the state of the vehicle could also be an indication that one of the parts of the vehicle, e.g., a component, system or subsystem, is operating abnormally.

As used herein, an “occupant restraint device” includes any type of device which is deployable in the event of a crash involving the vehicle for the purpose of protecting an occupant from the effects of the crash and/or minimizing the potential injury to the occupant. Occupant restraint devices thus include frontal airbags, side airbags, seatbelt tensioners, knee bolsters, side curtain airbags, externally deployable airbags and the like.

As used herein, a “part” of the vehicle includes any component, sensor, system or subsystem of the vehicle such as the steering system, braking system, throttle system, navigation system, airbag system, seatbelt retractor, air bag inflation valve, air bag inflation controller and airbag vent valve, as well as those listed below in the definitions of “component” and “sensor”.

As used herein, a “sensor system” includes any of the sensors listed below in the definition of “sensor” as well as any type of component or assembly of components which detect, sense and/or measure something.

Other objects and advantages of the present claimed invention and inventions disclosed below are set forth in the '186 application and others will become apparent from the following description of preferred embodiments taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The following drawings are illustrative of embodiments of the systems developed or adapted using the teachings of these inventions and are not meant to limit the scope of the invention as encompassed by the claims.

FIG. 1 is a schematic illustration of a generalized component with several signals being emitted and transmitted along a variety of paths, sensed by a variety of sensors and analyzed by the diagnostic module in accordance with the invention and for use in a method in accordance with the invention.

FIG. 2 is a schematic of one pattern recognition methodology known as a neural network which may be used in a method in accordance with the invention.

FIG. 3 is a schematic of a vehicle with several components and several sensors and a total vehicle diagnostic system in accordance with the invention utilizing a diagnostic module in accordance with the invention and which may be used in a method in accordance with the invention.

FIG. 4 is a flow diagram of information flowing from various sensors onto the vehicle data bus and thereby into the diagnostic module in accordance with the invention with outputs to a display for notifying the driver, and to the vehicle cellular phone for notifying another person, of a potential component failure.

FIG. 5 is an overhead view of a roadway with vehicles and a SAW road temperature and humidity monitoring sensor.

FIG. 5A is a detail drawing of the monitoring sensor of FIG. 5.

FIG. 6 is a perspective view of a SAW system for locating a vehicle on a roadway, and on the earth surface if accurate maps are available, and also illustrates the use of a SAW transponder in the license plate for the location of preceding vehicles and preventing rear end impacts.

FIG. 7 is a partial cutaway view of a section of a fluid reservoir with a SAW fluid pressure and temperature sensor for monitoring oil, water, or other fluid pressure.

FIG. 8 is a perspective view of a vehicle suspension system with SAW load sensors.

FIG. 8A is a cross section detail view of a vehicle spring and shock absorber system with a SAW torque sensor system mounted for measuring the stress in the vehicle spring of the suspension system of FIG. 8.

FIG. 8B is a detail view of a SAW torque sensor and shaft compression sensor arrangement for use with the arrangement of FIG. 8.

FIG. 9 is a cutaway view of a vehicle showing possible mounting locations for vehicle interior temperature, humidity, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, alcohol or other chemical or physical property measuring sensors.

FIG. 10A is a perspective view of a SAW tilt sensor using four SAW assemblies for tilt measurement and one for temperature.

FIG. 10B is a top view of a SAW tilt sensor using three SAW assemblies for tilt measurement each one of which can also measure temperature.

FIG. 11 is a perspective exploded view of a SAW crash sensor for sensing frontal, side or rear crashes.

FIG. 12 is a perspective view with portions cutaway of a SAW based vehicle gas gage.

FIG. 12A is a top detailed view of a SAW pressure and temperature monitor for use in the system of FIG. 12.

FIG. 13A is a schematic of a prior art deployment scheme for an airbag module.

FIG. 13B is a schematic of a deployment scheme for an airbag module in accordance with the invention.

FIG. 14 is a schematic of a vehicle with several accelerometers and/or gyroscopes at preferred locations in the vehicle.

FIG. 15A illustrates a driver with a timed RFID standing with groceries by a closed trunk.

FIG. 15B illustrates the driver with the timed RFID 5 seconds after the trunk has been opened.

FIG. 15C illustrates a trunk opening arrangement for a vehicle in accordance with the invention.

FIG. 16A is a view of a view of a SAW switch sensor for mounting on or within a surface such as a vehicle armrest.

FIG. 16B is a detailed perspective view of the device of FIG. 16A with the force-transmitting member rendered transparent.

FIG. 16C is a detailed perspective view of an alternate SAW device for use in FIGS. 16A and 16B showing the use of one of two possible switches, one that activates the SAW and the other that suppresses the SAW.

FIG. 17A is a detailed perspective view of a polymer and mass on SAW accelerometer for use in crash sensors, vehicle navigation, etc.

FIG. 17B is a detailed perspective view of a normal mass on SAW accelerometer for use in crash sensors, vehicle navigation, etc.

FIG. 18 is a view of a prior art SAW gyroscope that can be used with this invention.

FIGS. 19A, 19B and 19C are block diagrams of three interrogators that can be used with this invention to interrogate several different devices.

FIG. 20A is a top view of a system for obtaining information about a vehicle or a component therein, specifically information about the tires, such as pressure and/or temperature thereof.

FIG. 20B is a side view of the vehicle shown in FIG. 20A.

FIG. 20C is a schematic of the system shown in FIGS. 20A and 20B.

FIG. 21 is a top view of an alternate system for obtaining information about the tires of a vehicle.

FIG. 22 is a plot which is useful to illustrate the interrogator burst pulse determination for interrogating SAW devices.

FIG. 23 illustrates the shape of an echo pulse on input to the quadrature demodulator from a SAW device.

FIG. 24 illustrates the relationship between the burst and echo pulses for a 4 echo pulse SAW sensor.

FIG. 25 illustrates the paths taken by various surface waves on a tire temperature and pressure monitoring device of one or more of the inventions disclosed herein.

FIG. 26 is an illustration of a SAW tire temperature and pressure monitoring device.

FIG. 27 is a side view of the SAW device of FIG. 26.

FIG. 28 is a side view with parts cutaway and removed of a vehicle showing the passenger compartment containing a rear facing child seat on the front passenger seat and a mounting location for an occupant and rear facing child seat presence detector.

FIG. 29 is a flow chart of the methods for automatically monitoring a vehicular component in accordance with the invention.

FIG. 30 is a schematic illustration of the components used in the methods for automatically monitoring a vehicular component.

FIG. 31 is a side view with parts cutaway and removed showing schematically the interface between the vehicle interior monitoring system of this invention and the vehicle cellular communication system.

FIG. 32 is a diagram of one exemplifying embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 33 is a perspective view of a carbon dioxide SAW sensor for mounting in the trunk lid for monitoring the inside of the trunk for detecting trapped children or animals.

FIG. 33A is a detailed view of the SAW carbon dioxide sensor of FIG. 33.

FIG. 34 is a schematic view of overall telematics system in accordance with the invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 1.1 General Diagnostics and Prognostics

The output of a diagnostic system is generally the present condition of the vehicle or component. However, the vehicle operator wants to repair the vehicle or replace the component before it fails, but a diagnosis system in general does not specify when that will occur. Prognostics is the process of determining when the vehicle or a component will fail, i.e., predicting an impending or likely failure. At least one of the inventions disclosed herein in concerned with prognostics. Prognostics can be based on models of vehicle or component degradation and the effects of environment and usage. In this regard, it is useful to have a quantitative formulation of how the component degradation depends on environment, usage and current component condition. This formulation may be obtained by monitoring condition, environment and usage level, and by modeling the relationships with statistical techniques or pattern recognition techniques such as neural networks, combination neural networks and fuzzy logic. In some cases, it can also be obtained by theoretical methods or from laboratory experiments.

One embodiment of the vehicle diagnostic and prognostic unit described below performs the diagnosis and prognostics, i.e., processes input from the various sensors, on the vehicle using, for example, a processor embodying a pattern recognition technique such as a neural network. The processor thus receives data or signals from the sensors and generates an output indicative or representative of the operating conditions of the vehicle or its component. A signal could thus be generated indicative of an under-inflated tire, or an overheating engine, or other component-fault conditions.

For the discussion below, the following terms are defined as follows:

The term “component” as used herein generally refers to any part or assembly of parts which is mounted to or a part of a motor vehicle and which is capable of emitting a signal representative of its operating state. The following is a partial list of general automobile and truck components, the list not being exhaustive:

Engine; transmission; brakes and associated brake assembly; tires; wheel; steering wheel and steering column assembly; water pump; alternator; shock absorber; wheel mounting assembly; radiator; battery; oil pump; fuel pump; air conditioner compressor, differential gear assembly; exhaust system; fan belts; engine valves; steering assembly; vehicle suspension including shock absorbers; vehicle wiring system; and engine cooling fan assembly.

The term “sensor” as used herein generally refers to any measuring, detecting or sensing device mounted on a vehicle or any of its components including new sensors mounted in conjunction with the diagnostic module in accordance with the invention. A partial, non-exhaustive list of sensors that are or can be mounted on an automobile or truck includes:

Airbag crash sensor; microphone; camera; chemical sensor; vapor sensor; antenna, capacitance or other electric field sensor or other electromagnetic wave sensor; stress or strain sensor; pressure sensor; weight sensor, magnetic field sensor; coolant thermometer; oil pressure sensor, oil level sensor, air flow meter, voltmeter; ammeter, humidity sensor; engine knock sensor; oil turbidity sensor; throttle position sensor; steering wheel torque sensor; wheel speed sensor, tachometer; speedometer; other velocity sensors; other position or displacement sensors; oxygen or other gas sensor; yaw, pitch and roll angular sensors; clock; odometer; power steering pressure sensor; pollution sensor; fuel gauge; cabin thermometer; transmission fluid level sensor; gyroscopes or other angular rate sensors including yaw, pitch and roll rate sensors; accelerometers including single axis, dual axis and triaxial accelerometers; an inertial measurement unit; coolant level sensor; transmission fluid turbidity sensor; brake pressure sensor; tire pressure sensor; tire temperature sensor, tire acceleration sensor; GPS receiver; DGPS receiver; and coolant pressure sensor.

The term “signal” as used herein generally refers to any time-varying output from a component including electrical, acoustic, thermal, electromagnetic radiation or mechanical vibration.

Sensors on a vehicle are generally designed to measure particular parameters of particular vehicle components. However, frequently these sensors also measure outputs from other vehicle components. For example, electronic airbag crash sensors currently in use contain one or more accelerometers for determining the accelerations of the vehicle structure so that the associated electronic circuitry of the airbag crash sensor can determine whether a vehicle is experiencing a crash of sufficient magnitude so as to require deployment of the airbag. Each accelerometer continuously monitors the vibrations in the vehicle structure regardless of the source of these vibrations. If a wheel is out of balance, or if there is extensive wear of the parts of the front wheel mounting assembly, or wear in the shock absorbers, the resulting abnormal vibrations or accelerations can, in many cases, be sensed by a crash sensor accelerometer. There are other cases, however, where the sensitivity or location of an airbag crash sensor accelerometer is not appropriate and one or more additional accelerometers or gyroscopes may be mounted onto a vehicle for the purposes of this invention. Some airbag crash sensors are not sufficiently sensitive accelerometers or have sufficient dynamic range for the purposes herein.

For example, a technique for some implementations of an invention disclosed herein is the use of multiple accelerometers and/or microphones that will allow the system to locate the source of any measured vibrations based on the time of flight, time of arrival, direction of arrival and/or triangulation techniques. Once a distributed accelerometer installation, or one or more IMUs, has been implemented to permit this source location, the same sensors can be used for smarter crash sensing as it can permit the determination of the location of the impact on the vehicle. Once the impact location is known, a highly tailored algorithm can be used to accurately forecast the crash severity making use of knowledge of the force vs. crush properties of the vehicle at the impact location.

Every component of a vehicle can emit various signals during its life. These signals can take the form of electromagnetic radiation, acoustic radiation, thermal radiation, vibrations transmitted through the vehicle structure and voltage or current fluctuations, depending on the particular component. When a component is functioning normally, it may not emit a perceptible signal. In that case, the normal signal is no signal, i.e., the absence of a signal. In most cases, a component will emit signals that change over its life and it is these changes which typically contain information as to the state of the component, e.g., whether failure of the component is impending, or has actually occurred. Usually components do not fail without warning. However, most such warnings are either not perceived or if perceived, are not understood by the vehicle operator until the component actually fails and, in some cases, a breakdown of the vehicle occurs.

An important system and method as disclosed herein for acquiring data for performing the diagnostics, prognostics and health monitoring functions makes use of the acoustic transmissions from various components. This can involve the placement of one or more microphones, accelerometers, or other vibration sensors onto and/or at a variety of locations within the vehicle where the sound or vibrations are most effectively sensed. In addition to acquiring data relative to a particular component, the same sensors can also obtain data that permits analysis of the vehicle environment. A pothole, for example, can be sensed and located for possible notification to a road authority if a location determining apparatus is also resident on the vehicle.

In a few years, it is expected that various roadways will have systems for automatically guiding vehicles operating thereon. Such systems have been called “smart highways” and are part of the field of intelligent transportation systems (ITS). If a vehicle operating on such a smart highway were to breakdown due to the failure of a component, serious disruption of the system could result and the safety of other users of the smart highway could be endangered.

When a vehicle component begins to change its operating behavior, it is not always apparent from the particular sensors which are monitoring that component, if any. The output from any one of these sensors can be normal even though the component is failing. By analyzing the output of a variety of sensors, however, the pending failure can frequently be diagnosed. For example, the rate of temperature rise in the vehicle coolant, if it were monitored, might appear normal unless it were known that the vehicle was idling and not traveling down a highway at a high speed. Even the level of coolant temperature which is in the normal range could be in fact abnormal in some situations signifying a failing coolant pump, for example, but not detectable from the coolant thermometer alone.

The pending failure of some components is difficult to diagnose and sometimes the design of the component requires modification so that the diagnosis can be more readily made. A fan belt, for example, frequently begins failing as a result of a crack of the inner surface. The belt can be designed to provide a sonic or electrical signal when this cracking begins in a variety of ways. Similarly, coolant hoses can be designed with an intentional weak spot where failure will occur first in a controlled manner that can also cause a whistle sound as a small amount of steam exits from the hose. This whistle sound can then be sensed by a general purpose microphone, for example.

In FIG. 1, a generalized component 35 emitting several signals which are transmitted along a variety of paths, sensed by a variety of sensors and analyzed by the diagnostic device in accordance with the invention is illustrated schematically. Component 35 is mounted to a vehicle 52 and during operation it emits a variety of signals such as acoustic 36, electromagnetic radiation 37, thermal radiation 38, current and voltage fluctuations in conductor 39 and mechanical vibrations 40. Various sensors are mounted in the vehicle to detect the signals emitted by the component 35. These include one or more vibration sensors (accelerometers) 44, 46 and/or gyroscopes or one or more IMUs, one or more acoustic sensors 41, 47, electromagnetic radiation sensors 42, heat radiation sensors 43 and voltage or current sensors 45.

In addition, various other sensors 48, 49 measure other parameters of other components that in some manner provide information directly or indirectly on the operation of component 35. Each of the sensors illustrated in FIG. 1 can be connected to a data bus 50. A diagnostic module 51, in accordance with the invention, can also be attached to the vehicle data bus 50 and it can receive the signals generated by the various sensors. The sensors may however be wirelessly connected to the diagnostic module 51 and be integrated into a wireless power and communications system or a combination of wired and wireless connections. The wireless connection of one or more sensors to a receiver, controller or diagnostic module is an important teaching of one or more of the inventions disclosed herein.

The diagnostic module 51 will analyze the received data in light of the data values or patterns itself either statically or over time. In some cases, a pattern recognition algorithm as discussed below will be used and in others, a deterministic algorithm may also be used either alone or in combination with the pattern recognition algorithm. Additionally, when a new data value or sequence is discovered the information can be sent to an off-vehicle location, perhaps a dealer or manufacturer site, and a search can be made for other similar cases and the results reported back to the vehicle. Also additionally as more and more vehicles are reporting cases that perhaps are also examined by engineers or mechanics, the results can be sent to the subject vehicle or to all similar vehicles and the diagnostic software updated automatically. Thus, all vehicles can have the benefit from information relative to performing the diagnostic function. Similarly, the vehicle dealers and manufacturers can also have up-to-date information as to how a particular class or model of vehicle is performing. This telematics function is discussed in more detail elsewhere herein. By means of this system, a vehicle diagnostic system can predict component failures long before they occur and thus prevent on-road problems.

The invention therefore contemplates a variety of automatic communications from a vehicle to an interested party remote from the vehicle whether it is a dealer or manufacturer. In addition to the communication of diagnostic or prognostic information, derived for example by one of the techniques described above, the same telecommunications link can be used by the remote-situated interested party to provide a response to the message from the vehicle. For example, the message could be as simple as an automatic notification of receipt of information from the vehicle. If the remote party is a dealer, the response might be that the analysis of the diagnostic or prognostic problem has been received and is being reviewed. The response could also be a manually generated message by the dealer or manufacturer's personnel. One such responsive message might provide a time for a scheduled service appointment or a block of available times to schedule an appointment.

An important function that can be performed by the diagnostic system herein is to substantially diagnose the vehicle's own problems rather then forwarding raw data to a central site for diagnosis. Eventually, a prediction as to the failure point of all significant components can be made and the owner can have a prediction that the fan belt will last another 20,000 miles, or that the tires should be rotated in 2,000 miles or replaced in 20,000 miles. This information can be displayed or reported orally or sent to the dealer, or other service center, who can then schedule a time for the customer to visit the dealership or for the dealer to visit the vehicle wherever it is located. If it is displayed, it can be automatically displayed periodically or when there is urgency or whenever the operator desires. The display can be located at any convenient place such as the dashboard or it can be a heads-up display. The display can be any convenient technology such as an LCD display or an OLED based display. This can permit the vehicle manufacturer to guarantee that the owner will never experience a vehicle breakdown provided he or she permits the dealer to service the vehicle at appropriate times based on the output of the prognostics system.

It is worth emphasizing that in many cases, it is the rate that a parameter is changing that can be as or more important than the actual value in predicting when a component is likely to fail. In a simple case when a tire is losing pressure, for example, it is a quite different situation if it is losing one psi per day or one psi per minute. Similarly for the tire case, if the tire is heating up at one degree per hour or 100 degrees per hour may be more important in predicting failure due to delamination or overloading than the particular temperature of the tire.

The diagnostic module, or other component, can also consider situation awareness factors such as the age or driving habits of the operator, the location of the vehicle (e.g., is it in the desert, in the arctic in winter), the season, the weather forecast, the length of a proposed trip, the number and location of occupants of the vehicle etc. The system may even put limits on the operation of the vehicle such as turning off unnecessary power consuming components if the alternator is failing or limiting the speed of the vehicle if die driver is an elderly woman sitting close to the steering wheel, for example. Furthermore, the system may change the operational parameters of the vehicle such as the engine RPM or the fuel mixture if doing so will prolong vehicle operation. In some cases where there is doubt whether a component is failing, the vehicle operating parameters may be temporarily varied by the system in order to accentuate the signal from the component to permit more accurate diagnosis.

In addition to the above discussion there are some diagnostic features already available on some vehicles some of which are related to the federally mandated OBD-II and can be included in the general diagnostics and health monitoring features of this invention. In typical applications, the set of diagnostic data includes at least one of the following: diagnostic trouble codes, vehicle speed, fuel level, fuel pressure, miles per gallon, engine RPM, mileage, oil pressure, oil temperature, tire pressure, tire temperature, engine coolant temperature, intake-manifold pressure, engine-performance tuning parameters, alarm status, accelerometer status, cruise-control status, fuel-injector performance, spark-plug timing, and a status of an anti-lock braking system.

The data parameters within the set describe a variety of electrical, mechanical, and emissions-related functions in the vehicle. Several of the more significant parameters from the set are:

Pending DTCs (Diagnostic Trouble Codes)

Ignition Timing Advance

Calculated Load Value

Air Flow Rate MAP Sensor

Engine RPM

Engine Coolant Temperature

Intake Air Temperature

Absolute Throttle Position Sensor

Vehicle Speed

Short-Term Fuel Trim

Long-Term Fuel Trim

MIL Light Status

Oxygen Sensor Voltage

Oxygen Sensor Location

Delta Pressure Feedback EGR Pressure Sensor

Evaporative Purge Solenoid Duty cycle

Fuel Level Input Sensor

Fuel Tank Pressure Voltage

Engine Load at the Time of Misfire

Engine RPM at the Time of Misfire

Throttle Position at the Time of Misfire

Vehicle Speed at the Time of Misfire

Number of Misfires

Transmission Fluid Temperature

PRNDL position (1, 2, 3, 4, 5=neutral, 6=reverse)

Number of Completed OBDII Trips, and

Battery Voltage.

When the diagnostic system determines that the operator is operating the vehicle in such a manner that the failure of a component is accelerated, then a warning can be issued to the operator. For example, the driver may have inadvertently placed the automatic gear shift lever in a lower gear and be driving at a higher speed than he or she should for that gear. In such a case, the driver can be notified to change gears.

Managing the diagnostics and prognostics of a complex system has been termed “System Health Management” and has not been applied to over the road vehicles such as trucks and automobiles. Such systems are used for fault detection and identification, failure prediction (estimating the time to failure), tracking degradation, maintenance scheduling, error correction in the various measurements which have been corrupted and these same tasks are applicable here.

Various sensors, both wired and wireless, will be discussed below. Representative of such sensors are those available from Honeywell which are MEMS-based sensors for measuring temperature, pressure, acoustic emission, strain, and acceleration. The devices are based on resonant microbeam force sensing technology. Coupled with a precision silicon microstructure, the resonant microbeams provide a high sensitivity for measuring inertial acceleration, inclination, and vibrations. Alternate designs based on SAW technology lend themselves more readily to wireless and powerless operation as discussed below. The Honeywell sensors can be networked wirelessly but still require power.

Since this system is independent of the dedicated sensor monitoring system and instead is observing more than one sensor, inconsistencies in sensor output can be detected and reported indicating the possible erratic or inaccurate operation of a sensor even if this is intermittent (such as may be caused by a lose wire) thus essentially eliminating many of the problems reported in the above-referenced article “What's Bugging the High-Tech Car”. Furthermore, the software can be independent of the vehicle specific software for a particular sensor and system and can further be based on pattern recognition, to be discussed next, rendering it even less likely to provide the wrong diagnostic. Since the output from the diagnostic and prognostic system herein described can be sent via telematics to the dealer and vehicle manufacturer, the occurrence of a sensor or system failure can be immediately logged to form a frequency of failure log for a particular new vehicle model allowing the manufacturer to more quickly schedule a recall if a previously unknown problem surfaces in the field.

1.2 Pattern Recognition

In accordance with at least one invention, each of the signals emitted by the sensors can be converted into electrical signals and then digitized (i.e., the analog signal is converted into a digital signal) to create numerical time series data which is entered into a processor. Pattern recognition algorithms can be applied by the processor to attempt to identify and classify patterns in this time series data. For a particular component, such as a tire for example, the algorithm attempts to determine from the relevant digital data whether the tire is functioning properly or whether it requires balancing, additional air, or perhaps replacement.

Frequently, the data entered into the pattern recognition algorithm needs to be preprocessed before being analyzed. The data from a wheel speed sensor, for example, might be used “as is” for determining whether a particular tire is operating abnormally in the event it is unbalanced, whereas the integral of the wheel speed data over a long time period (a preprocessing step), when compared to such sensors on different wheels, might be more useful in determining whether a particular tire is going flat and therefore needs air. This is the basis of some tire monitors now on the market. Such indirect systems are not permitted as a means for satisfying federal safety requirements. These systems generally depend on the comparison of the integral of the wheel speed to determine the distance traveled by the wheel surface and that system is then compared with other wheels on the vehicle to determine that one tire has relatively less air than another. Of course this system fails if all of the tires have low pressure. One solution is to compare the distance traveled by a wheel with the distance that it should have traveled. If the angular motion (displacement and/or velocity) of the wheel axle is known, than this comparison can be made directly. Alternately, if the position of the vehicle is accurately monitored so that the actual travel along its path can be determined through a combination of GPS and an IMU, for example, then again the pressure within a vehicle tire can be determined.

In some cases, the frequencies present in a set of data are a better predictor of component failures than the data itself. For example, when a motor begins to fail due to worn bearings, certain characteristic frequencies began to appear. In most cases, the vibrations arising from rotating components, such as the engine, will be normalized based on the rotational frequency. Moreover, the identification of which component is causing vibrations present in the vehicle structure can frequently be accomplished through a frequency analysis of the data. For these cases, a Fourier transformation of the data can be made prior to entry of the data into a pattern recognition algorithm. Wavelet transforms and other mathematical transformations are also made for particular pattern recognition purposes in practicing the teachings of this invention. Some of these include shifting and combining data to determine phase changes for example, differentiating the data, filtering the data and sampling the data. Also, there exist certain more sophisticated mathematical operations that attempt to extract or highlight specific features of the data. The inventions herein contemplate the use of a variety of these preprocessing techniques and the choice of which one or ones to use is left to the skill of the practitioner designing a particular diagnostic and prognostic module. Note, whenever diagnostics is used below it will be assumed to also include prognostics.

As shown in FIG. 1, the diagnostic module 51 has access to the output data of each of the sensors that are known to have or potentially may have information relative to or concerning the component 35. This data appears as a series of numerical values each corresponding to a measured value at a specific point in time. The cumulative data from a particular sensor is called a time series of individual data points. The diagnostic module 51 compares the patterns of data received from each sensor individually, or in combination with data from other sensors, with patterns for which the diagnostic module has been programmed or trained to determine whether the component is functioning normally or abnormally.

Important to some embodiments of the inventions herein is the manner in which the diagnostic module 51 determines a normal pattern from an abnormal pattern and the manner in which it decides what data to use from the vast amount of data available. This can be accomplished using pattern recognition technologies such as artificial neural networks and training and in particular, combination neural networks as described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/413,426 (Publication 20030209893). The theory of neural networks including many examples can be found in several books on the subject including: (1) Techniques And Application Of Neural Networks, edited by Taylor, M. and Lisboa, P., Ellis Horwood, West Sussex, England, 1993; (2) Naturally Intelligent Systems, by Caudill. M. and Butler. C., MIT Press. Cambridge Mass., 1990; (3) J. M. Zaruda, Introduction to Artificial Neural Systems, West Publishing Co., N.Y., 1992, (4) Digital Neural Networks, by Kung, S. Y., PTR Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1993, Eberhart, R., Simpson, P., (5) Dobbins, R., Computational Intelligence PC Tools, Academic Press, Inc., 1996, Orlando, Fla., (6) Cristianini, N. and Shawe-Taylor, J. An Introduction to Support Vector Machines and other kernal-based learning methods, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge England, 2000; (7) Proceedings of the 2000 6^(th) IEEE International Workshop on Cellular Neural Networks and their Applications (CNNA 2000), IEEE, Piscataway N.J.; and (8) Sinha, N. K. and Gupta, M. M. Soft Computing & Intelligent Systems, Academic Press 2000 San Diego, Calif. The neural network pattern recognition technology is one of the most developed of pattern recognition technologies. The invention described herein frequently uses combinations of neural networks to improve the pattern recognition process, as discussed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/413,426.

The neural network pattern recognition technology is one of the most developed of pattern recognition technologies. The neural network will be used here to illustrate one example of a pattern recognition technology but it is emphasized that this invention is not limited to neural networks. Rather, the invention may apply any known pattern recognition technology including various segmentation techniques, sensor fusion and various correlation technologies. In some cases, the pattern recognition algorithm is generated by an algorithm-generating program and in other cases, it is created by, e.g., an engineer, scientist or programmer. A brief description of a particular simple example of a neural network pattern recognition technology is set forth below.

Neural networks are constructed of processing elements known as neurons that are interconnected using information channels called interconnects and are arranged in a plurality of layers. Each neuron can have multiple inputs but generally only one output. Each output however is usually connected to many, frequently all, other neurons in the next layer. The neurons in the first layer operate collectively on the input data as described below. Neural networks learn by extracting relational information from the data and the desired output. Neural networks have been applied to a wide variety of pattern recognition problems including automobile occupant sensing, speech recognition, optical character recognition and handwriting analysis.

To train a neural network, data is provided in the form of one or more time series, from the sensors, that represents the condition to be diagnosed, which can be induced to artificially create an abnormally operating component, as well as normal operation. Thus, data from the sensors obtained during normal operation of each component, as well as during abnormal operation of each component, is provided to the neural network during the training stage. In the training stage of the neural network or other type of pattern recognition algorithm, the time series data for both normal and abnormal component operation is entered into a processor which applies a neural network-generating program to output a neural network capable of determining abnormal operation of a component. The pattern recognition algorithm thereby detects trends or patterns in the time series received from the sensors. Once the trained pattern recognition algorithm is installed on a vehicle, during operation of the vehicle, data in the form of time series from sensors will be input to the pattern recognition algorithm to enable a determination of the actual or impending failure of a component. This determination is thereby achieved through use of the patterns in the time series which have been used to create the pattern recognition algorithm.

As an example, the simple case of an out-of-balance tire will be used. Various sensors on the vehicle can be used to extract information from signals emitted by the tire such as an accelerometer, a torque sensor on the steering wheel, the pressure output of the power steering system, a tire pressure monitor or tire temperature monitor. Since the vehicle components differ from vehicle to vehicle, data from sensors on one vehicle cannot be used to train a pattern recognition algorithm for installation on another vehicle and therefore, vehicle model-specific data must be provided for each vehicle. Other sensors that might not have an obvious relationship to tire unbalance (or imbalance) are also included such as, for example, the vehicle speed or wheel speed that can be determined from the anti-lock brake (ABS) system. Data is taken from a variety of vehicles where the tires were accurately balanced under a variety of operating conditions also for cases where varying amounts of tire unbalance was intentionally introduced. Once the data had been collected, some degree of pre-processing (e.g., time or frequency modification) and/or feature extraction is usually performed to reduce the total amount of data fed to the neural network-generating program. In the case of the unbalanced tire, the time period between data points might be selected such that there are at least ten data points per revolution of the wheel. For some other application, the time period might be one minute or one millisecond.

Once the data has been collected, it is processed by the neural network-generating program, for example, if a neural network pattern recognition system is to be used. Such programs are available commercially, e.g., from NeuralWare of Pittsburgh, Pa. or from International Scientific Research, Inc., of Panama for modular neural networks. The program proceeds in a trial and error manner until it successfully associates the various patterns representative of abnormal behavior, an unbalanced tire in this case, with that condition. The resulting neural network can be tested to determine if some of the input data from some of the sensors, for example, can be eliminated. In this manner, the engineer can determine what sensor data is relevant to a particular diagnostic problem. The program then generates an algorithm that is programmed onto a microprocessor, microcontroller, neural processor, FPGA, or DSP (herein collectively referred to as a microprocessor or processor). Such a microprocessor appears inside the diagnostic module 51 in FIG. 1.

Once trained, the neural network, as represented by the algorithm, is installed in a processor unit of a motor vehicle and will now recognize an unbalanced tire on the vehicle when this event occurs. At that time, when the tire is unbalanced, the diagnostic module 51 will receive output from the sensors, determine whether the output is indicative of abnormal operation of the tire, e.g., lack of tire balance, and instruct or direct another vehicular system to respond to the unbalanced tire situation. Such an instruction may be a message to the driver indicating that the tire should now be balanced, as described below. The message to the driver is provided by an output device coupled to or incorporated within the module 51, e.g., an icon or text display, and may be a light on the dashboard, a vocal tone or any other recognizable indication apparatus. A similar message may also be sent to the dealer, vehicle manufacturer or other repair facility or remote facility via a communications channel between the vehicle and the dealer or repair facility which is established by a suitable transmission device.

It is important to note that there may be many neural networks involved in a total vehicle diagnostic system. These can be organized either in parallel, series, as an ensemble, cellular neural network or as a modular neural network system. In one implementation of a modular neural network, a primary neural network identifies that there is an abnormality and tries to identify the likely source. Once a choice has been made as to the likely source of the abnormality, another, specific neural network of a group of neural networks can be called upon to determine the exact cause of the abnormality. In this manner, the neural networks are arranged in a tree pattern with each neural network trained to perform a particular pattern recognition task. Of course, one or more combination neural networks can be used.

Discussions on the operation of a neural network can be found in the above references on the subject and are understood by those skilled in the art. Neural networks are the most well-known of the pattern recognition technologies based on training, although neural networks have only recently received widespread attention and have been applied to only very limited and specialized problems in motor vehicles such as occupant sensing (by the current assignee) and engine control (by Ford Motor Company). Other non-training based pattern recognition technologies exist, such as fuzzy logic. However, the programming required to use fuzzy logic, where the patterns must be determine by the programmer, usually render these systems impractical for general vehicle diagnostic problems such as described herein (although their use is not impossible in accordance with the teachings of the invention). Therefore, preferably the pattern recognition systems that learn by training are used herein. It should be noted that neural networks are frequently combined with fuzzy logic and such a combination is contemplated herein. The neural network is the first highly successful of what will be a variety of pattern recognition techniques based on training. There is nothing that suggests that it is the only or even the best technology. The characteristics of all of these technologies which render them applicable to this general diagnostic problem include the use of time-of frequency-based input data and that they are trainable. In most cases, the pattern recognition technology learns from examples of data characteristic of normal and abnormal component operation.

A diagram of one example of a neural network used for diagnosing an unbalanced tire, for example, based on the teachings of this invention is shown in FIG. 2. The process can be programmed to periodically test for an unbalanced tire. Since this need be done only infrequently, the same processor can be used for many such diagnostic problems. When the particular diagnostic test is nm, data from the previously determined relevant sensor(s) is preprocessed and analyzed with the neural network algorithm. For the unbalanced tire, using the data from an accelerometer for example, the digital acceleration values from the analog-to-digital converter in the accelerometer are entered into nodes 1 through n and the neural network algorithm compares the pattern of values on nodes 1 through n with patterns for which it has been trained as follows.

Each of the input nodes is usually connected to each of the second layer nodes, h-1, h-2, . . . , h-n, called the hidden layer, either electrically as in the case of a neural computer, or through mathematical functions containing multiplying coefficients called weights, in the manner described in more detail in the above references. At each hidden layer node, a summation occurs of the values from each of the input layer nodes, which have been operated on by functions containing the weights, to create a node value. Similarly, the hidden layer nodes are, in a like manner, connected to the output layer node(s), which in this example is only a single node 0 representing the decision to notify the driver, and/or a remote facility, of the unbalanced tire. During the training phase, an output node value of 1, for example, is assigned to indicate that the driver should be notified and a value of 0 is assigned to not notifying the driver.

In the example above, twenty input nodes were used, five hidden layer nodes and one output layer node. In this example, only one sensor was considered and accelerations from only one direction were used. If other data from other sensors such as accelerations from the vertical or lateral directions were also used, then the number of input layer nodes would increase. Again, the theory for determining the complexity of a neural network for a particular application has been the subject of many technical papers and will not be presented in detail here. Determining the requisite complexity for the example presented here can be accomplished by those skilled in the art of neural network design. Also one particular preferred type of neural network has been discussed. Many other types exist as discussed in the above references and the inventions herein is not limited to the particular type discussed here.

Briefly, the neural network described above defines a method, using a pattern recognition system, of sensing an unbalanced tire and determining whether to notify the driver, and/or a remote facility, and comprises the steps of:

(a) obtaining an acceleration signal from an accelerometer mounted on a vehicle;

(b) converting the acceleration signal into a digital time series;

(c) entering the digital time series data into the input nodes of the neural network;

(d) performing a mathematical operation on the data from each of the input nodes and inputting the operated on data into a second series of nodes wherein the operation performed on each of the input node data prior to inputting the operated-on value to a second series node is different from that operation performed on some other input node data (e.g., a different weight value can be used);

(e) combining the operated-on data from most or all of the input nodes into each second series node to form a value at each second series node;

(f) performing a mathematical operation on each of the values on the second series of nodes and inputting this operated-on data into an output series of nodes wherein the operation performed on each of the second series node data prior to inputting the operated-on value to an output series node is different from that operation performed on some other second series node data;

(g) combining the operated-on data from most or all of the second series nodes into each output series node to form a value at each output series node; and,

(h) notifying a driver if the value on one output series node is within a selected range signifying that a tire requires balancing.

This method can be generalized to a method of predicting that a component of a vehicle will fail comprising the steps of:

(a) sensing a signal emitted from the component;

(b) converting the sensed signal into a digital time series;

(c) entering the digital time series data into a pattern recognition algorithm;

(d) executing the pattern recognition algorithm to determine if there exists within the digital time series data a pattern characteristic of abnormal operation of the component; and

(e) notifying a driver and/or a remote facility if the abnormal pattern is recognized.

The analysis above is based on time series data. Sometimes the signals from a failing component are distributed in space and thus a spatial data distribution may be appropriate for use alone or in conjunction with a temporal data distribution. Neural networks and other pattern recognition systems are adept at spatial as well as temporal data analysis. The segmentation and identification of objects in an image is an example. Spatial data an frequently be represented as time series data as when a scanner is used and temporal data can be represented as spatial data as when an oscilloscope is used.

The particular neural network described and illustrated above contains a single series of hidden layer nodes. In some network designs, more than one hidden layer is used, although only rarely will more than two such layers appear. There are of course many other variations of the neural network architecture illustrated above which appear in the referenced literature. For the purposes herein, therefore, “neural network” can be defined as a system wherein the data to be processed is separated into discrete values which are then operated on and combined in at least a two stage process and where the operation performed on the data at each stage is in general different for each discrete value and where the operation performed is at least determined through a training process. A different operation here is meant any difference in the way that the output of a neuron is treated before it is inputted into another neuron such as multiplying it by a different weight or constant.

The implementation of neural networks can take on at least two forms, an algorithm programmed on a digital microprocessor, FPGA, DSP or in a neural computer (including a cellular neural network or support vector machine). In this regard, it is noted that neural computer chips are now becoming available.

In the example above, only a single component failure was discussed using only a single sensor since the data from the single sensor contains a pattern which the neural network was trained to recognize as either normal operation of the component or abnormal operation of the component. The diagnostic module 51 contains preprocessing and neural network algorithms for a number of component failures. The neural network algorithms are generally relatively simple, requiring only a relatively small number of lines of computer code. A single general neural network program can be used for multiple pattern recognition cases by specifying different coefficients for the various node inputs, one set for each application. Thus, adding different diagnostic checks has only a small affect on the cost of the system. Also, the system can have available to it all of the information available on the data bus.

During the training process, the pattern recognition program sorts out from the available vehicle data on the data bus or from other sources, those patterns that predict failure of a particular component. If more than one sensor is used to sense the output from a component, such as two spaced-apart microphones or acceleration sensors, then the location of the component can sometimes be determined by triangulation based on the phase difference, time of arrival and/or angle of arrival of the signals to the different sensors. In this manner, a particular vibrating tire can be identified, for example. Since each tire on a vehicle does not always make the same number of revolutions in a given time period, a tire can be identified by comparing the wheel sensor output with the vibration or other signal from the tire to identify the failing tire. The phase of the failing tire will change relative to the other tires, for example. This technique can also be used to associate a tire pressure monitor RF signal with a particular tire. An alternate method for tire identification makes use of an RFID tag or an RFID switch as discussed below.

In view of the foregoing, a method for diagnosing whether one or more components of a vehicle are operating abnormally would entail in a training stage, obtaining output from the sensors during normal operation of the components, adjusting each component to induce abnormal operation thereof and obtaining output from the sensors during the induced abnormal operation, and

determining which sensors provide data about abnormal operation of each component based on analysis of the output from the sensors during normal operation and during induced abnormal operation of the component, e.g., differences between signals output from the sensors during normal and abnormal operation. The output from the sensors can be processed and pre-processed as described above. When obtaining output from the sensors during abnormal component operation, different abnormalities can be induced in the components, one abnormality in one component at each time and/or multiple abnormalities in multiple components at one time.

During operation of the vehicle, output from the sensors is received and a determination is made whether any of the components are operating abnormally by analyzing the output from those sensors which have been determined to provide data about abnormal operation of that component. This determination is used to alert a driver of the vehicle, a vehicle manufacturer, a vehicle dealer or a vehicle repair facility about the abnormal operation of a component. As mentioned above, the determination of whether any of the components are operating abnormally may involve considering output from only those sensors which have been determined to provide data about abnormal operation of that component. This could be a subset of the sensors, although it is possible when using a neural network to input all of the sensor data with the neural network being designed to disregard output from sensors which have no bearing on the determination of abnormal operation of the component operating abnormally.

When a combination neural network 810 is used, its training can involve multiple steps (see the description of FIGS. 92 and 93 in the parent '240 application).

In FIG. 3, a schematic of a vehicle with several components and several sensors is shown in their approximate locations on a vehicle along with a total vehicle diagnostic system in accordance with the invention utilizing a diagnostic module in accordance with the invention. A flow diagram of information passing from the various sensors shown in FIG. 3 onto the vehicle data bus, wireless communication system, wire harness or a combination thereof, and thereby into the diagnostic device in accordance with the invention is shown in FIG. 4 along with outputs to a display for notifying the driver and to the vehicle cellular phone, or other communication device, for notifying the dealer, vehicle manufacturer or other entity concerned with the failure of a component in the vehicle. If the vehicle is operating on a smart highway, for example, the pending component failure information may also be communicated to a highway control system and/or to other vehicles in the vicinity so that an orderly exiting of the vehicle from the smart highway can be facilitated. FIG. 4 also contains the names of the sensors shown numbered in FIG. 3.

Note, where applicable in one or more of the inventions disclosed herein, any form of wireless communication is contemplated for intra vehicle communications between various sensors and components including amplitude modulation, frequency modulation, TDMA, CDMA, spread spectrum, ultra wideband and all variations. Similarly, all such methods are also contemplated for vehicle-to-vehicle or vehicle-to-infrastructure communication.

Sensor 1 is a crash sensor having an accelerometer (alternately one or more dedicated accelerometers or IMUs 31 can be used), sensor 2 is represents one or more microphones, sensor 3 is a coolant thermometer, sensor 4 is an oil pressure sensor, sensor 5 is an oil level sensor, sensor 6 is an air flow meter, sensor 7 is a voltmeter, sensor 8 is an ammeter, sensor 9 is a humidity sensor, sensor 10 is an engine knock sensor, sensor 11 is an oil turbidity sensor, sensor 12 is a throttle position sensor, sensor 13 is a steering torque sensor, sensor 14 is a wheel speed sensor, sensor 15 is a tachometer, sensor 16 is a speedometer, sensor 17 is an oxygen sensor, sensor 18 is a pitch/roll sensor, sensor 19 is a clock, sensor 20 is an odometer, sensor 21 is a power steering pressure sensor, sensor 22 is a pollution sensor, sensor 23 is a fuel gauge, sensor 24 is a cabin thermometer, sensor 25 is a transmission fluid level sensor, sensor 26 is a yaw sensor, sensor 27 is a coolant level sensor, sensor 28 is a transmission fluid turbidity sensor, sensor 29 is brake pressure sensor and sensor 30 is a coolant pressure sensor. Other possible sensors include a temperature transducer, a pressure transducer, a liquid level sensor, a flow meter, a position sensor, a velocity sensor, a RPM sensor, a chemical sensor and an angle sensor, angular rate sensor or gyroscope.

If a distributed group of acceleration sensors or accelerometers are used to permit a determination of the location of a vibration source, the same group can, in some cases, also be used to measure the pitch, yaw and/or roll of the vehicle eliminating the need for dedicated angular rate sensors. In addition, as mentioned above, such a suite of sensors can also be used to determine the location and severity of a vehicle crash and additionally to determine that the vehicle is on the verge of rolling over. Thus, the same suite of accelerometers optimally performs a variety of functions including inertial navigation, crash sensing, vehicle diagnostics, roll-over sensing etc.

Consider now some examples. The following is a partial list of potential component failures and the sensors from the list in FIG. 4 that might provide information to predict the failure of the component:

Out of balance tires 1,13,14,15,20,21

Front end out of alignment 1,13,21,26

Tune up required 1,3,10,12,15,17,20,22

Oil change needed 3,4,5,11

Motor failure 1,2,3,4,5,6,10,12,15,17,22

Low tire pressure 1,13,14,15,20,21

Front end looseness 1,13,16,21,26

Cooling system failure 3,15,24,27,30

Alternator problems 1,2,7,8,15,19,20

Transmission problems 1,3,12,15,16,20,25,28

Differential problems 1,12,14

Brakes 1,2,14,18,20,26,29

Catalytic converter and muffler 1,2,12,15,22

Ignition 1,2,7,8,9,10,12,17,23

Tire wear 1,13,14,15,18,20,21,26

Fuel leakage 20,23

Fan belt slippage 1,2,3,7,8,12,15,19,20

Alternator deterioration 1,2,7,8,15,19

Coolant pump failure 1,2,3,24,27,30

Coolant hose failure 1,2,3,27,30

Starter failure 1,2,7,8,9,12,15

Dirty air filter 2,3,6,11,12,17,22

Several interesting facts can be deduced from a review of the above list. First, all of the failure modes listed can be at least partially sensed by multiple sensors. In many cases, some of the sensors merely add information to aid in the interpretation of signals received from other sensors. In today's automobile, there are few if any cases where multiple sensors are used to diagnose or predict a problem. In fact, there is virtually no failure prediction (prognostics) undertaken at all. Second, many of the failure modes listed require information from more than one sensor. Third, information for many of the failure modes listed cannot be obtained by observing one data point in time as is now done by most vehicle sensors. Usually an analysis of the variation in a parameter as a function of time is necessary. In fact, the association of data with time to create a temporal pattern for use in diagnosing component failures in automobile is believed to be unique to the inventions herein as is the combination of several such temporal patterns. Fourth, the vibration measuring capability of the airbag crash sensor, or other accelerometer or IMU, is useful for most of the cases discussed above yet there is no such current use of accelerometers. The airbag crash sensor is used only to detect crashes of the vehicle. Fifth, the second most used sensor in the above list, a microphone, does not currently appear on any automobiles, yet sound is the signal most often used by vehicle operators and mechanics to diagnose vehicle problems. Another sensor that is listed above which also does not currently appear on automobiles is a pollution sensor. This is typically a chemical sensor mounted in the exhaust system for detecting emissions from the vehicle. It is expected that this and other chemical and biological sensors will be used more in the future. Such a sensor can be used to monitor the intake of air from outside the vehicle to permit such a flow to be cut off when it is polluted. Similarly, if the interior air is polluted, the exchange with the outside air can be initiated.

In addition, from the foregoing depiction of different sensors which receive signals from a plurality of components, it is possible for a single sensor to receive and output signals from a plurality of components which are then analyzed by the processor to determine if any one of the components for which the received signals were obtained by that sensor is operating in an abnormal state. Likewise, it is also possible to provide for a plurality of sensors each receiving a different signal related to a specific component which are then analyzed by the processor to determine if that component is operating in an abnormal state. Neural networks can simultaneously analyze data from multiple sensors of the same type or different types (a form of sensor fusion).

As can be appreciated from the above discussion, an invention described herein brings several new improvements to vehicles including, but not limited to, the use of pattern recognition technologies to diagnose potential vehicle component failures, the use of trainable systems thereby eliminating the need of complex and extensive programming, the simultaneous use of multiple sensors to monitor a particular component, the use of a single sensor to monitor the operation of many vehicle components, the monitoring of vehicle components which have no dedicated sensors, and the notification of both the driver and possibly an outside entity of a potential component failure prior to failure so that the expected failure can be averted and vehicle breakdowns substantially eliminated. Additionally, improvements to the vehicle stability, crash avoidance, crash anticipation and occupant protection are available.

To implement a component diagnostic system for diagnosing the component utilizing a plurality of sensors not directly associated with the component, i.e., independent of the component, a series of tests are conducted. For each test, the signals received from the sensors are input into a pattern recognition training algorithm with an indication of whether the component is operating normally or abnormally (the component being intentionally altered to provide for abnormal operation). The data from the test are used to generate the pattern recognition algorithm, e.g., neural network, so that in use, the data from the sensors is input into the algorithm and the algorithm provides an indication of abnormal or normal operation of the component. Also, to provide a more versatile diagnostic module for use in conjunction with diagnosing abnormal operation of multiple components, tests may be conducted in which each component is operated abnormally while the other components are operating normally, as well as tests in which two or more components are operating abnormally. In this manner, the diagnostic module may be able to determine based on one set of signals from the sensors during use that either a single component or multiple components are operating abnormally. Additionally, if a failure occurs which was not forecasted, provision can be made to record the output of some or all of the vehicle data and later make it available to the vehicle manufacturer for inclusion into the pattern recognition training database. Also, it is not necessary that a neural network system that is on a vehicle be a static system and some amount of learning can, in some cases, be permitted. Additionally, as the vehicle manufacturer updates the neural networks, the newer version can be downloaded to particular vehicles either when the vehicle is at a dealership or wirelessly via a cellular network or by satellite.

Furthermore, the pattern recognition algorithm may be trained based on patterns within the signals from the sensors. Thus, by means of a single sensor, it would be possible to determine whether one or more components are operating abnormally. To obtain such a pattern recognition algorithm, tests are conducted using a single sensor, such as a microphone, and causing abnormal operation of one or more components, each component operating abnormally while the other components operate normally and multiple components operating abnormally. In this manner, in use, the pattern recognition algorithm may analyze a signal from a single sensor and determine abnormal operation of one or more components. Note that in some cases, simulations can be used to analytically generate the relevant data.

The discussion above has centered mainly on the blind training of a pattern recognition system, such as a neural network, so that faults can be discovered and failures forecast before they happen. Naturally, the diagnostic algorithms do not have to start out being totally dumb and in fact, the physics or structure of the systems being monitored can be appropriately used to help structure or derive the diagnostic algorithms. Such a system is described in a recent article “Immobots Take Control”, MIT Technology Review December, 2002. Also, of course, it is contemplated that once a potential failure has been diagnosed, the diagnostic system can in some cases act to change the operation of various systems in the vehicle to prolong the time of a failing component before the failure or in some rare cases, the situation causing the failure might be corrected. An example of the first case is where the alternator is failing and various systems or components can be turned off to conserve battery power and an example of the second case is rollover of a vehicle may be preventable through the proper application of steering torque and wheel braking force. Such algorithms can be based on pattern recognition or on models, as described in the Immobot article referenced above, or a combination thereof and all such systems are contemplated by the invention described herein.

1.3 SAW and Other Wireless Sensors

Many sensors are now in vehicles and many more will be installed in vehicles. The following disclosure is primarily concerned with wireless sensors which can be based on MEMS, SAW and/or RFID technologies. Vehicle sensors include tire pressure, temperature and acceleration monitoring sensors; weight or load measuring sensors; switches; vehicle temperature, acceleration, angular position, angular rate, angular acceleration sensors; proximity: rollover; occupant presence; humidity; presence of fluids or gases; strain; road condition and friction, chemical sensors and other similar sensors providing information to a vehicle system, vehicle operator or external site. The sensors can provide information about the vehicle and/or its interior or exterior environment, about individual components, systems, vehicle occupants, subsystems, and/or about the roadway, ambient atmosphere, travel conditions and external objects.

For wireless sensors, one or more interrogators can be used each having one or more antennas that transmit energy at radio frequency, or other electromagnetic frequencies, to the sensors and receive modulated frequency signals from the sensors containing sensor and/or identification information. One interrogator can be used for sensing multiple switches or other devices. For example, an interrogator may transmit a chirp form of energy at 905 MHz to 925 MHz to a variety of sensors located within and/or in the vicinity of the vehicle. These sensors may be of the RFID electronic type and/or of the surface acoustic wave (SAW) type or a combination thereof. In the electronic type, information can be returned immediately to the interrogator in the form of a modulated backscatter RF signal. In the case of SAW devices, the information can be returned after a delay. RFID tags may also exhibit a delay due to the charging of the energy storage device. Naturally, one sensor can respond in both the electronic (either RFID or backscatter) and SAW delayed modes.

When multiple sensors are interrogated using the same technology, the returned signals from the various sensors can be time, code, space or frequency multiplexed. For example, for the case of the SAW technology, each sensor can be provided with a different delay or a different code. Alternately, each sensor can be designed to respond only to a single frequency or several frequencies. The radio frequency can be amplitude, code or frequency modulated. Space multiplexing can be achieved through the use of two or more antennas and correlating the received signals to isolate signals based on direction.

In many cases, the sensors will respond with an identification signal followed by or preceded by information relating to the sensed value, state and/or property. In the case of a SAW-based or RFID-based switch, for example, the returned signal may indicate that the switch is either on or off or, in some cases, an intermediate state can be provided signifying that a light should be dimmed, rather than or on or off, for example. Alternately or additionally, an RFID based switch can be associated with a sensor and turned on or off based on an identification code or a frequency sent from the interrogator permitting a particular sensor or class of sensors to be selected.

SAW devices have been used for sensing many parameters including devices for chemical and biological sensing and materials characterization in both the gas and liquid phase. They also are used for measuring pressure, strain, temperature, acceleration, angular rate and other physical states of the environment.

Economies are achieved by using a single interrogator or even a small number of interrogators to interrogate many types of devices. For example, a single interrogator may monitor tire pressure and temperature, the weight of an occupying item of the seat, the position of the seat and seatback, as well as a variety of switches controlling windows, door locks, seat position, etc. in a vehicle. Such an interrogator may use one or multiple antennas and when multiple antennas are used, may switch between the antennas depending on what is being monitored.

Similarly, the same or a different interrogator can be used to monitor various components of the vehicle's safety system including occupant position sensors, vehicle acceleration sensors, vehicle angular position, velocity and acceleration sensors, related to both frontal, side or rear impacts as well as rollover conditions. The interrogator could also be used in conjunction with other detection devices such as weight sensors, temperature sensors, accelerometers which are associated with various systems in the vehicle to enable such systems to be controlled or affected based on the measured state.

Some specific examples of the use of interrogators and responsive devices will now be described.

The antennas used for interrogating the vehicle tire pressure transducers can be located outside of the vehicle passenger compartment. For many other transducers to be sensed the antennas can be located at various positions within passenger compartment. At least one invention herein contemplates, therefore, a series of different antenna systems, which can be electronically switched by the interrogator circuitry. Alternately, in some cases, all of the antennas can be left connected and total transmitted power increased.

There are several applications for weight or load measuring devices in a vehicle including the vehicle suspension system and seat weight sensors for use with automobile safety systems. As described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,096,740, U.S. Pat. No. 4,623,813, U.S. Pat. No. 5,585,571, U.S. Pat. No. 5,663,531, U.S. Pat. No. 5,821,425 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,910,647 and International Publication No. WO 00/65320(A1), SAW devices are appropriate candidates for such weight measurement systems, although in some cases RFID systems can also be used with an associated sensor such as a strain gage. In this case, the surface acoustic wave on the lithium niobate, or other piezoelectric material, is modified in delay time, resonant frequency, amplitude and/or phase based on strain of the member upon which the SAW device is mounted. For example, the conventional bolt that is typically used to connect the passenger seat to the seat adjustment slide mechanism can be replaced with a stud which is threaded on both ends. A SAW or other strain device can be mounted to the center unthreaded section of the stud and the stud can be attached to both the seat and the slide mechanism using appropriate threaded nuts. Based on the particular geometry of the SAW device used, the stud can result in as little as a 3 mm upward displacement of the seat compared to a normal bolt mounting system. No wires are required to attach the SAW device to the stud other than for an antenna.

In use, the interrogator transmits a radio frequency pulse at, for example, 925 MHz that excites antenna on the SAW strain measuring system. After a delay caused by the time required for the wave to travel the length of the SAW device, a modified wave is re-transmitted to the interrogator providing an indication of the strain of the stud with the weight of an object occupying the seat corresponding to the strain. For a seat that is normally bolted to the slide mechanism with four bolts, at least four SAW strain sensors could be used. Since the individual SAW devices are very small, multiple devices can be placed on a stud to provide multiple redundant measurements, or permit bending and twisting strains to be determined, and/or to permit the stud to be arbitrarily located with at least one SAW device always within direct view of the interrogator antenna. In some cases, the bolt or stud will be made on non-conductive material to limit the blockage of the RP signal. In other cases, it will be insulated from the slide (mechanism) and used as an antenna.

If two longitudinally spaced apart antennas are used to receive the SAW or RFID transmissions from the seat weight sensors, one antenna in front of the seat and the other behind the seat, then the position of the seat can be determined eliminating the need for current seat position sensors. A similar system can be used for other seat and seatback position measurements.

For strain gage weight sensing, the frequency of interrogation can be considerably higher than that of the tire monitor, for example. However, if the seat is unoccupied, then the frequency of interrogation can be substantially reduced. For an occupied seat, information as to the identity and/or category and position of an occupying item of the seat can be obtained through the multiple weight sensors described. For this reason, and due to the fact that during the pre-crash event, the position of an occupying item of the seat may be changing rapidly, interrogations as frequently as once every 10 milliseconds or faster can be desirable. This would also enable a distribution of the weight being applied to the seat to be obtained which provides an estimation of the center of pressure and thus the position of the object occupying the seat. Using pattern recognition technology, e.g., a trained neural network, sensor fusion, fuzzy logic, etc., an identification of the object can be ascertained based on the determined weight and/or determined weight distribution.

There are many other methods by which SAW devices can be used to determine the weight and/or weight distribution of an occupying item other than the method described above and all such uses of SAW strain sensors for determining the weight and weight distribution of an occupant are contemplated. For example, SAW devices with appropriate straps can be used to measure the deflection of the seat cushion top or bottom caused by an occupying item, or if placed on the seat belts, the load on the belts can determined wirelessly and powerlessly. Geometries similar to those disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,242,701 (which discloses multiple strain gage geometries) using SAW strain-measuring devices can also be constructed, e.g., any of the multiple strain gage geometries shown therein.

Generally there is an RFID implementation that corresponds to each SAW implementation. Therefore, where SAW is used herein the equivalent RFID design will also be meant where appropriate.

Although one method for using the invention is to interrogate each of the SAW devices using wireless mechanisms, in some cases, it may be desirable to supply power to and/or obtain information from one or more of the SAW devices using wires. As such, the wires would be an optional feature.

One advantage of the weight sensors of this invention along with the geometries disclosed in the '701 patent and herein below, is that in addition to the axial stress in the seat support, the bending moments in the structure can be readily determined. For example, if a seat is supported by four “legs”, it is possible to determine the state of stress, assuming that axial twisting can be ignored, using four strain gages on each leg support for a total of 16 such gages. If the seat is supported by three legs, then this can be reduced to 12 gages. Naturally, a three-legged support is preferable to four since with four legs, the seat support is over-determined which severely complicates the determination of the stress caused by an object on the seat. Even with three supports, stresses can be introduced depending on the nature of the support at the seat rails or other floor-mounted supporting structure. If simple supports are used that do not introduce bending moments into the structure, then the number of gages per seat can be reduced to three, which is advantageous provided a good model of the seat structure is available. Unfortunately, this is usually not the case and most seats have four supports and the attachments to the vehicle not only introduce bending moments into the structure but these moments vary from one position to another and with temperature. The SAW strain gages of this invention lend themselves to the placement of multiple gages onto each support as needed to approximately determine the state of stress and thus the weight of the occupant depending on the particular vehicle application. Furthermore, the wireless nature of these gages greatly simplifies the placement of such gages at those locations that are most appropriate. Note that a strain gage here can be a bridge configuration consisting of either 2 or 4 strain sensing elements or a single strain gage element in a non-bridge or bridge configuration.

An additional point should be mentioned. In many cases, the determination of the weight of an occupant from the static strain gage readings yields inaccurate results due to the indeterminate stress state in the support structure. However, the dynamic stresses to a first order are independent of the residual stress state. Thus, the change in stress that occurs as a vehicle travels down a roadway caused by dips in the roadway can provide an accurate measurement of the weight of an object in a seat. This is especially true if an accelerometer is used to measure the vertical excitation provided to the seat.

Some vehicle models provide load leveling and ride control functions that depend on the magnitude and distribution of load carried by the vehicle suspension. Frequently, wire strain gage technology is used for these functions. That is, the wire strain gages are used to sense the load and/or load distribution of the vehicle on the vehicle suspension system. Such strain gages can be advantageously replaced with strain gages based on SAW technology with the significant advantages in terms of cost, wireless monitoring, dynamic range, and signal level. In addition, SAW strain gage systems can be more accurate than wire strain gage systems.

A strain detector in accordance with this invention can convert mechanical strain to variations in electrical signal frequency with a large dynamic range and high accuracy even for very small displacements. The frequency variation is produced through use of a surface acoustic wave (SAW) delay line as the frequency control element of an oscillator. A SAW delay line comprises a transducer deposited on a piezoelectric material such as quartz or lithium niobate which is arranged so as to be deformed by strain in the member which is to be monitored. Deformation of the piezoelectric substrate changes the frequency control characteristics of the surface acoustic wave delay line, thereby changing the frequency of the oscillator. Consequently, the oscillator frequency change is a measure of the strain in the member being monitored and thus the weight applied to the seat. A SAW strain transducer can be more accurate than a conventional resistive strain gage.

Other applications of weight measuring systems for an automobile include measuring the weight of the fuel tank or other containers of fluid to determine the quantity of fluid contained therein as described below.

One problem with SAW devices is that if they are designed to operate at the GHz frequency, the feature sizes become exceeding small and the devices are difficult to manufacture, although techniques are now available for making SAW devices in the tens of GHz range. On the other hand, if the frequencies are considerably lower, for example, in the tens of megahertz range, then the antenna sizes become excessive. It is also more difficult to obtain antenna gain at the lower frequencies. This is also related to antenna size. One method of solving this problem is to transmit an interrogation signal in the high GHz range which is modulated at the hundred MHz range. At the SAW transducer, the transducer is tuned to the modulated frequency. Using a nonlinear device such as a Shocky diode, the modified signal can be mixed with the incoming high frequency signal and re-transmitted through the same antenna. For this case, the interrogator can continuously broadcast the carrier frequency.

Devices based on RFID or SAW technology can be used as switches in a vehicle as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,078,252, U.S. Pat. No. 6,144,288 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,748,797. There are many ways that this can be accomplished. A switch can be used to connect an antenna to either an RFID electronic device or to a SAW device. This of course requires contacts to be closed by the switch activation. An alternate approach is to use pressure from an occupant's finger, for example, to alter die properties of the acoustic wave on the SAW material much as in a SAW touch screen. The properties that can be modified include the amplitude of the acoustic wave, and its phase, and/or the time delay or an external impedance connected to one of the SAW reflectors as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,084,503. In this implementation, the SAW transducer can contain two sections, one which is modified by the occupant and the other which serves as a reference. A combined signal is sent to the interrogator that decodes the signal to determine that the switch has been activated. By any of these technologies, switches can be arbitrarily placed within the interior of an automobile, for example, without the need for wires. Since wires and connectors are the cause of most warranty repairs in an automobile, not only is the cost of switches substantially reduced but also the reliability of the vehicle electrical system is substantially improved.

The interrogation of switches can take place with moderate frequency such as once every 100 milliseconds. Either through the use of different frequencies or different delays, a large number of switches can be time, code, space and/or frequency multiplexed to permit separation of the signals obtained by the interrogator. Alternately, an RF activated switch on some or all of the sensors can be used as discussed below.

Another approach is to attach a variable impedance device across one of the reflectors on the SAW device. The impedance can therefore be used to determine the relative reflection from the reflector compared to other reflectors on the SAW device. In this manner, the magnitude as well as the presence of a force exerted by an occupant's finger, for example, can be used to provide a rate sensitivity to the desired function. In an alternate design, as shown U.S. Pat. No. 6,144,288, the switch is used to connect the antenna to the SAW device. Of course, in this case, the interrogator will not get a return from the SAW switch unless it is depressed.

Temperature measurement is another field in which SAW technology can be applied and the invention encompasses several embodiments of SAW temperature sensors.

U.S. Pat. No. 4,249,418 is one of many examples of prior art SAW temperature sensors. Temperature sensors are commonly used within vehicles and many more applications might exist if a low cost wireless temperature sensor is available such as disclosed herein. The SAW technology can be used for such temperature sensing tasks. These tasks include measuring the vehicle coolant temperature, air temperature within passenger compartment at multiple locations, seat temperature for use in conjunction with seat warming and cooling systems, outside temperatures and perhaps tire surface temperatures to provide early warning to operators of road freezing conditions. One example, is to provide air temperature sensors in the passenger compartment in the vicinity of ultrasonic transducers used in occupant sensing systems as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,943,295, since the speed of sound in the air varies by approximately 20% from −40° C. to 85° C. Current ultrasonic occupant sensor systems do not measure or compensate for this change in the speed of sound with the effect of reducing the accuracy of the systems at the temperature extremes. Through the judicious placement of SAW temperature sensors in the vehicle, the passenger compartment air temperature can be accurately estimated and the information provided wirelessly to the ultrasonic occupant sensor system thereby permitting corrections to be made for the change in the speed of sound.

Since the road can be either a source or a sink of thermal energy, strategically placed sensors that measure the surface temperature of a tire can also be used to provide an estimate of road temperature.

Acceleration sensing is another field in which SAW technology can be applied and the invention encompasses several embodiments of SAW accelerometers.

U.S. Pat. No. 4,199,990, U.S. Pat. No. 4,306,456 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,549,436 are examples of prior art SAW accelerometers. Most airbag crash sensors for determining whether the vehicle is experiencing a frontal or side impact currently use micromachined accelerometers. These accelerometers are usually based on the deflection of a mass which is sensed using either capacitive or piezoresistive technologies. SAW technology has previously not been used as a vehicle accelerometer or for vehicle crash sensing. Due to the importance of this function, at least one interrogator could be dedicated to this critical function. Acceleration signals from the crash sensors should be reported at least preferably every 100 microseconds. In this case, the dedicated interrogator would send an interrogation pulse to all crash sensor accelerometers every 100 microseconds and receive staggered acceleration responses from each of the SAW accelerometers wirelessly. This technology permits the placement of multiple low-cost accelerometers at ideal locations for crash sensing including inside the vehicle side doors, in the passenger compartment and in the frontal crush zone. Additionally, crash sensors can now be located in the rear of the vehicle in the crush zone to sense rear impacts. Since the acceleration data is transmitted wirelessly, concern about the detachment or cutting of wires from the sensors disappears. One of the main concerns, for example, of placing crash sensors in the vehicle doors where they most appropriately can sense vehicle side impacts, is the fear that an impact into the A-pillar of the automobile would sever the wires from the door-mounted crash sensor before the crash was sensed. This problem disappears with the current wireless technology of this invention. If two accelerometers are placed at some distance from each other, the roll acceleration of the vehicle can be determined and thus the tendency of the vehicle to rollover can be predicted in time to automatically take corrective action and/or deploy a curtain airbag or other airbag(s). Other types of sensors such as crash sensors based on pressure measurements, such as supplied by Siemens, can also now be wireless.

Although the sensitivity of measurement is considerably greater than that obtained with conventional piezo-electric or micromachined accelerometers, the frequency deviation of SAW devices remains low (in absolute value). Accordingly, the frequency drift of thermal origin should be made as low as possible by selecting a suitable cut of the piezoelectric material. The resulting accuracy is impressive as presented in U.S. Pat. No. 4,549,436, which discloses an angular accelerometer with a dynamic a range of 1 million, temperature coefficient of 0.005%/deg F., an accuracy of 1 microradian/sec², a power consumption of 1 milliwatt, a drift of 0.01% per year, a volume of 1 cc/axis and a frequency response of 0 to 1000 Hz. The subject matter of the '436 patent is hereby included in the invention to constitute a part of the invention. A similar design can be used for acceleration sensing.

In a similar manner as the polymer-coated SAW device is used to measure pressure, a device wherein a seismic mass is attached to a SAW device through a polymer interface can be made to sense acceleration. This geometry has a particular advantage for sensing accelerations below 1 G, which has proved to be very difficult for conventional micro-machined accelerometers due to their inability to both measure low accelerations and withstand high acceleration shocks.

Gyroscopes are another field in which SAW technology can be applied and the inventions herein encompass several embodiments of SAW gyroscopes.

SAW technology is particularly applicable for gyroscopes as described in International Publication No. WO 00/79217A2 to Varadan et al. The output of such gyroscopes can be determined with an interrogator that is also used for the crash sensor accelerometers, or a dedicated interrogator can be used. Gyroscopes having an accuracy of approximately 1 degree per second have many applications in a vehicle including skid control and other dynamic stability functions. Additionally, gyroscopes of similar accuracy can be used to sense impending vehicle rollover situations in time to take corrective action.

SAW gyroscopes of the type described in WO 00/79217A2 have the capability of achieving accuracies approaching about 3 degrees per hour. This high accuracy permits use of such gyroscopes in an inertial measuring unit (IMU) that can be used with accurate vehicle navigation systems and autonomous vehicle control based on differential GPS corrections. Such a system is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,370,475. An alternate preferred technology for an IMU is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,711,125 to Morrison discussed below. Such navigation systems depend on the availability of four or more GPS satellites and an accurate differential correction signal such as provided by the OmniStar Corporation, NASA or through the National Differential GPS system now being deployed. The availability of these signals degrades in urban canyon environments, in tunnels and on highways when the vehicle is in the vicinity of large trucks. For this application, an IMU system should be able to accurately control the vehicle for perhaps 15 seconds and preferably for up to five minutes. IMUs based on SAW technology, the technology of U.S. Pat. No. 4,549,436 discussed above or of the U.S. Pat. No. 4,711,125 are the best-known devices capable of providing sufficient accuracies for this application at a reasonable cost. Other accurate gyroscope technologies such as fiber optic systems are more accurate but can be cost-prohibitive, although recent analysis by the current assignee indicates that such gyroscopes can eventually be made cost-competitive. In high volume production, an IMU of the required accuracy based on SAW technology is estimated to cost less than about $100. A cost competing technology is that disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,711,125 which does not use SAW technology.

A discussion of typical problems with the Morrison Cube of U.S. Pat. No. 4,711,125, known as the QUBIK™, that are encountered with sensors that try to measure multiple physical quantities at the same time and the manner in which the QUBIK solves these problems is set forth in U.S. Pat. No. 7,103,460.

Once an IMU of the accuracy described above is available in the vehicle, this same device can be used to provide significant improvements to vehicle stability control and rollover prediction systems.

Keyless entry systems are another field in which SAW technology can be applied and the invention encompasses several embodiments of access control systems using SAW devices.

A common use of SAW or RFID technology is for access control to buildings however, the range of electronic unpowered RFID technology is usually limited to one meter or less. In contrast, the SAW technology, when powered or boosted, can permit sensing up to about 30 meters. As a keyless entry system, an automobile can be configured such that the doors unlock as the holder of a card containing the SAW ID system approaches the vehicle and similarly, the vehicle doors can be automatically locked when the occupant with the card travels beyond a certain distance from the vehicle. When the occupant enters the vehicle, the doors can again automatically lock either through logic or through a current system wherein doors automatically lock when the vehicle is placed in gear. An occupant with such a card would also not need to have an ignition key. The vehicle would recognize that the SAW-based card was inside vehicle and then permit the vehicle to be started by issuing an oral command if a voice recognition system is present or by depressing a button, for example, without the need for an ignition key.

SAW sensors operating in the wireless mode can also be used to sense for ice on the windshield or other exterior surfaces of the vehicle, condensation on the inside of the windshield or other interior surfaces, rain sensing, heat-load sensing and many other automotive sensing functions. They can also be used to sense outside environmental properties and states including temperature, humidity, etc.

SAW sensors can be economically used to measure the temperature and humidity at numerous places both inside and outside of a vehicle. When used to measure humidity inside the vehicle, a source of water vapor can be activated to increase the humidity when desirable and the air conditioning system can be activated to reduce the humidity when necessary or desirable. Temperature and humidity measurements outside of the vehicle can be an indication of potential road icing problems. Such information can be used to provide early warning to a driver of potentially dangerous conditions. Although the invention described herein is related to land vehicles, many of these advances are equally applicable to other vehicles such as airplanes and even, in some cases, homes and buildings. The invention disclosed herein, therefore, is not limited to automobiles or other land vehicles.

Road condition sensing is another field in which SAW technology can be applied and the invention encompasses several embodiments of SAW road condition sensors.

The temperature and moisture content of the surface of a roadway are critical parameters in determining the icing state of the roadway. Attempts have been made to measure the coefficient of friction between a tire and the roadway by placing strain gages in the tire tread. Naturally, such strain gages are ideal for the application of SAW technology especially since they can be interrogated wirelessly from a distance and they require no power for operation. As discussed herein, SAW accelerometers can also perform this function. The measurement of the friction coefficient, however, is not predictive and the vehicle operator is only able to ascertain the condition after the fact. Boosted SAW or RFID based transducers have the capability of being interrogated as much as 100 feet from the interrogator. Therefore, the judicious placement of low-cost powerless SAW or RFID temperature and humidity sensors in and/or on the roadway at critical positions can provide an advance warning to vehicle operators that the mad ahead is slippery. Such devices are very inexpensive and therefore could be placed at frequent intervals along a highway.

An infrared sensor that looks down the highway in front of the vehicle can actually measure the road temperature prior to the vehicle traveling on that part of the roadway. This system also would not give sufficient warning if the operator waited for the occurrence of a frozen roadway. The probability of the roadway becoming frozen, on the other hand, can be predicted long before it occurs, in most cases, by watching the trend in the temperature. Once vehicle-to-vehicle communications are common, roadway icing conditions can be communicated between vehicles.

Some lateral control of the vehicle can also be obtained from SAW transducers or electronic RFID tags placed down the center of the lane, either above the vehicles and/or in the roadway, for example. A vehicle having two receiving antennas, for example, approaching such devices, through triangulation or direct proportion, is able to determine the lateral location of the vehicle relative to these SAW devices. If the vehicle also has an accurate map of the roadway, the identification number associated with each such device can be used to obtain highly accurate longitudinal position determinations. Ultimately, the SAW devices can be placed on structures beside the road and perhaps on every mile or tenth of a mile marker. If three antennas are used, as discussed herein, the distances from the vehicle to the SAW device can be determined. These SAW devices can be powered in order to stay below current FCC power transmission limits. Such power can be supplied by a photocell, energy harvesting where applicable, by a battery or power connection.

Electronic RFID tags are also suitable for lateral and longitudinal positioning purposes, however, the range available for current electronic RFID systems can be less than that of SAW-based systems unless either are powered. On the other hand, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,748,797, the time-of-flight of the RFID system can be used to determine the distance from the vehicle to the RFID tag. Because of the inherent delay in the SAW devices and its variation with temperature, accurate distance measurement is probably not practical based on time-of-flight but somewhat less accurate distance measurements based on relative time-of-arrival can be made. Even if the exact delay imposed by the SAW device was accurately known at one temperature, such devices are usually reasonably sensitive to changes in temperature, hence they make good temperature sensors, and thus the accuracy of the delay in the SAW device is more difficult to maintain. An interesting variation of an electronic RFID that is particularly applicable to this and other applications of this invention is described in A. Pohl, L. Reindl, “New passive sensors”, Proc. 16th IEEE Instrumentation and Measurement Technology Conf., IMTC/99, 1999, pp. 1251-1255.

Many SAW devices are based on lithium niobate or similar strong piezoelectric materials. Such materials have high thermal expansion coefficients. An alternate material is quartz that has a very low thermal expansion coefficient. However, its piezoelectric properties are inferior to lithium niobate. One solution to this problem is to use lithium niobate as the coupling system between the antenna and the material or substrate upon which the surface acoustic wave travels. In this manner, the advantages of a low thermal expansion coefficient material can be obtained while using the lithium niobate for its strong piezoelectric properties. Other useful materials such as Langasite™ have properties that are intermediate between lithium niobate and quartz.

The use of SAW tags as an accurate precise positioning system as described above would be applicable for accurate vehicle location, as discussed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,370,475, for lanes in tunnels, for example, or other cases where loss of satellite lock, and thus the primary vehicle location system, is common.

The various technologies discussed above can be used in combination. The electronic RFID tag can be incorporated into a SAW tag providing a single device that provides both a quick reflection of the radio frequency waves as well as a re-transmission at a later time. This marriage of the two technologies permits the strengths of each technology to be exploited in the same device. For most of the applications described herein, the cost of mounting such a tag in a vehicle or on the roadway far exceeds the cost of the tag itself. Therefore, combining the two technologies does not significantly affect the cost of implementing tags onto vehicles or roadways or side highway structures.

A variation of this design is to use an RF circuit such as in an RFID to serve as an energy source. One design could be for the RFID to operate with directional antennas at a relatively high frequency such as 2.4 GHz. This can be primarily used to charge a capacitor to provide the energy for boosting the signal from the SAW sensor using circuitry such as a circulator discussed below. The SAW sensor can operate at a lower frequency, such as 400 MHz, permitting it to not interfere with the energy transfer to the RF circuit and also permit the signal to travel better to the receiver since it will be difficult to align the antenna at all times with the interrogator. Also, by monitoring the reception of the RF signal the angular position of the tire can be determined and the SAW circuit designed so that it only transmits when the antennas are aligned or whet the vehicle is stationary. Many other opportunities now present themselves with the RF circuit operating at a different frequency from the SAW circuit which will now be obvious to one skilled in the art.

An alternate method to the electronic RFID tag is to simply use a radar or lidar reflector and measure the time-of-flight to the reflector and back. The reflector can even be made of a series of reflecting surfaces displaced from each other to achieve some simple coding. It should be understood that RFID antennas can be similarly configured. An improvement would be to polarize the radiation and use a reflector that rotates the polarization angle allowing the reflector to be more easily found among other reflecting objects.

Another field in which SAW technology can be applied is for “ultrasound-on-a-surface” type of devices. U.S. Pat. No. 5,629,681, assigned to the current assignee herein and incorporated by reference herein, describes many uses of ultrasound in a tube. Many of the applications are also candidates for ultrasound-on-a-surface devices. In this case, a micro-machined SAW device will in general be replaced by a much larger structure.

Based on the frequency and power available, and on FCC limitations. SAW or RFID or similar devices can be designed to permit transmission distances of many feet especially if minimal power is available. Since SAW and RFID devices can measure both temperature and humidity, they are also capable of monitoring road conditions in front of and around a vehicle. Thus, a properly equipped vehicle can determine the road conditions prior to entering a particular road section if such SAW devices are embedded in the road surface or on mounting structures close to the road surface as shown at 60 in FIG. 5. Such devices could provide advance warning of freezing conditions, for example. Although at 60 miles per hour such devices may only provide a one second warning if powered or if the FCC revises permitted power levels, this can be sufficient to provide information to a driver to prevent dangerous skidding. Additionally, since the actual temperature and humidity can be reported, the driver will be warned prior to freezing of the road surface. SAW device 60 is shown in detail in FIG. 5A. With vehicle-to-vehicle communication, the road conditions can be communicated as needed.

If a SAW device 63 is placed in a roadway, as illustrated in FIG. 6, and if a vehicle 68 has two receiving antennas 61 and 62, an interrogator can transmit a signal from either of the two antennas and at a later time, the two antennas will receive the transmitted signal from the SAW device 63. By comparing the arrival time of the two received pulses, the position of vehicle 68 on a lane of the roadway can precisely calculated. If the SAW device 63 has an identification code encoded into the returned signal generated thereby, then a processor in the vehicle 68 can determine its position on the surface of the earth, provided a precise map is available such as by being stored in the processor's memory. If another antenna 66 is provided, for example, at the rear of the vehicle 68, then the longitudinal position of the vehicle 68 can also be accurately determined as the vehicle 68 passes the SAW device 63.

The SAW device 63 does not have to be in the center of the road. Alternate locations for positioning of the SAW device 63 are on overpasses above the road and on poles such as 64 and 65 on the roadside. For such cases, a source of power may be required. Such a system has an advantage over a competing system using radar and reflectors in that it is easier to measure the relative time between the two received pulses than it is to measure time-of-flight of a radar signal to a reflector and back. Such a system operates in all weather conditions and is known as a precise location system. Eventually, such a SAW device 63 can be placed every tenth of a mile along the roadway or at some other appropriate spacing. For the radar or laser radar reflection system, the reflectors can be active devices that provide environmental information in addition to location information to the interrogating vehicle.

If a vehicle is being guided by a DGPS and an accurate map system such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,405,132 is used, a problem arises when the GPS receiver system looses satellite lock as would happen when the vehicle enters a tunnel, for example. If a precise location system as described above is placed at the exit of the tunnel, then the vehicle will know exactly where it is and can re-establish satellite lock in as little as one second rather than typically 15 seconds as might otherwise be required. Other methods making use of the cell phone system can be used to establish an approximate location of the vehicle suitable for rapid acquisition of satellite lock as described in G. M. Djuknic, R. E. Richton “Geolocation and Assisted GPS”, Computer Magazine, February 2001, IEEE Computer Society, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. An alternate location system is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,480,788.

More particularly, geolocation technologies that rely exclusively on wireless networks such as time of arrival, time difference of arrival, angle of arrival, timing advance, and multipath fingerprinting, as is known to those skilled in the art, offer a shorter time-to-first-fix (TTFF) than GPS. They also offer quick deployment and continuous tracking capability for navigation applications, without the added complexity and cost of upgrading or replacing any existing GPS receiver in vehicles. Compared to either mobile-station-based, stand-alone GPS or network-based geolocation, assisted-GPS (AGPS) technology offers superior accuracy, availability and coverage at a reasonable cost. AGPS for use with vehicles can comprise a communications unit with a minimal capability GPS receiver arranged in the vehicle, an AGPS server with a reference GPS receiver that can simultaneously “see” the same satellites as the communications unit and a wireless network infrastructure consisting at least of base stations and a mobile switching center. The network can accurately predict the GPS signal the communication unit will receive and convey that information to the mobile unit such as a vehicle, greatly reducing search space size and shortening the TTFF from minutes to a second or less. In addition, an AGPS receiver in the communication unit can detect and demodulate weaker signals than those that conventional GPS receivers require. Because the network performs the location calculations, the communication unit only needs to contain a scaled-down GPS receiver. It is accurate within about 15 meters when they are outdoors, an order of magnitude more sensitive than conventional GPS. Of course with the additional of differential corrections and carrier phase corrections, the location accuracy can be improved to centimeters.

Since an AGPS server can obtain the vehicle's position from the mobile switching center, at least to the level of cell and sector, and at the same time monitor signals from GPS satellites seen by mobile stations, it can predict the signals received by the vehicle for any given time. Specifically, the server can predict the Doppler shift due to satellite motion of GPS signals received by the vehicle, as well as other signal parameters that are a function of the vehicle's location. In a typical sector, uncertainty in a satellite signal's predicted time of arrival at the vehicle is about ±5 μs, which corresponds to ±5 chips of the GPS coarse acquisition (C/A) code. Therefore, an AGPS server can predict the phase of the pseudorandom noise (PRN) sequence that the receiver should use to despread the C/A signal from a particular satellite (each GPS satellite transmits a unique PRN sequence used for range measurements) and communicate that prediction to the vehicle. The search space for the actual Doppler shift and PRN phase is thus greatly reduced, and the AGPS receiver can accomplish the task in a fraction of the time required by conventional GPS receivers. Further, the AGPS server maintains a connection with the vehicle receiver over the wireless link, so the requirement of asking the communication unit to make specific measurements, collect the results and communicate them back is easily net. After despreading and some additional signal processing, an AGPS receiver returns back “pseudoranges” (that is, ranges measured without taking into account the discrepancy between satellite and receiver clocks) to the AGPS server, which then calculates the vehicle's location. The vehicle can even complete the location fix itself without returning any data to the server. Further discussion of cellular location-based systems can be found in Caffery, J J. Wireless Location in CDMA Cellular Radio Systems, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1999, ISBN: 0792377036.

Sensitivity assistance, also known as modulation wipe-off, provides another enhancement to detection of GPS signals in the vehicle's receiver. The sensitivity-assistance message contains predicted data bits of the GPS navigation message, which are expected to modulate the GPS signal of specific satellites at specified times. The mobile station receiver can therefore remove bit modulation in the received GPS signal prior to coherent integration. By extending coherent integration beyond the 20-ms GPS data-bit period (to a second or more when the receiver is stationary and to 400 ms when it is fast-moving) this approach improves receiver sensitivity. Sensitivity assistance provides an additional 3-to-4-dB improvement in receiver sensitivity. Because some of the gain provided by the basic assistance (code phases and Doppler shift values) is lost when integrating the GPS receiver chain into a mobile system, this can prove crucial to making a practical receiver.

Achieving optimal performance of sensitivity assistance in TIA/EIA-95 CDMA systems is relatively straightforward because base stations and mobiles synchronize with GPS time. Given that global system for mobile communication (GSM), time division multiple access (TDMA), or advanced mobile phone service (AMPS) systems do not maintain such stringent synchronization, implementation of sensitivity assistance and AGPS technology in general will require novel approaches to satisfy the timing requirement. The standardized solution for GSM and TDMA adds time calibration receivers in the field (location measurement units) that can monitor both the wireless-system timing and GPS signals used as a timing reference.

Many factors affect the accuracy of geolocation technologies, especially terrain variations such as hilly versus flat and environmental differences such as urban versus suburban versus rural. Other factors, like cell size and interference, have smaller but noticeable effects. Hybrid approaches that use multiple geolocation technologies appear to be the most robust solution to problems of accuracy and coverage.

AGPS provides a natural fit for hybrid solutions since it uses the wireless network to supply assistance data to GPS receivers in vehicles. This feature makes it easy to augment the assistance-data message with low-accuracy distances from receiver to base stations measured by the network equipment. Such hybrid solutions benefit from the high density of base stations in dense urban environments, which are hostile to GPS signals. Conversely, rural environments, where base stations are too scarce for network-based solutions to achieve high accuracy, provide ideal operating conditions for AGPS because GPS works well there.

From the above discussion, AGPS can be a significant part of the location determining system on a vehicle and can be used to augment other more accurate systems such as DGPS and a precise positioning system based on road markers or signature matching as discussed above and in patents assigned to Intelligent Technologies International.

SAW transponders can also be placed in the license plates 67 (FIG. 6) of all vehicles at nominal cost. An appropriately equipped automobile can then determine the angular location of vehicles in its vicinity. If a third antenna 66 is placed at the center of the vehicle front, then a more accurate indication of the distance to a license plate of a preceding vehicle can also be obtained as described above. Thus, once again, a single interrogator coupled with multiple antenna systems can be used for many functions. Alternately, if more than one SAW transponder is placed spaced apart on a vehicle and if two antennas are on the other vehicle, then the direction and position of the SAW-equipped vehicle can be determined by the receiving vehicle. The vehicle-mounted SAW or RFID device can also transmit information about the vehicle on which it is mounted such as the type of vehicle (car, van, SUV, truck, emergency vehicle etc.) as well as its weight and/or mass. One problem with many of the systems disclosed above results from the low power levels permitted by the FCC. Thus changes in FCC regulations may be required before some of them can be implemented in a powerless mode.

A general SAW temperature and pressure gage which can be wireless and powerless is shown generally at 70 located in the sidewall 73 of a fluid container 74 in FIG. 7. A pressure sensor 71 is located on the inside of the container 74, where it measures deflection of the container wall, and the fluid temperature sensor 72 on the outside. The temperature measuring SAW 70 can be covered with an insulating material to avoid the influence of the ambient temperature outside of the container 74.

A SAW load sensor can also be used to measure load in the vehicle suspension system powerless and wirelessly as shown in FIG. 8. FIG. 8A illustrates a strut 75 such as either of the rear struts of the vehicle of FIG. 8. A coil spring 80 stresses in torsion as the vehicle encounters disturbances from the road and this torsion can be measured using SAW strain gages as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,585,571 for measuring the torque in shafts. This concept is also described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,714,695. Use of SAW strain gages to measure the torsional stresses in a spring, as shown in FIG. 8B, and in particular in an automobile suspension spring, is believed to have been first disclosed by the inventor herein, or other of the assignee's employees or agents. In FIG. 8B, the strain measured by SAW strain gage 78 is subtracted from the strain measured by SAW strain gage 77 to get the temperature compensated strain in spring 76.

Since a portion of the dynamic load is also carried by the shock absorber, the SAW strain gages 77 and 78 will only measure the steady or average load on the vehicle. However, additional SAW strain gages 79 can be placed on a piston rod 81 of the shock absorber to obtain the dynamic load. These load measurements can then be used for active or passive vehicle damping or other stability control purposes. Knowing the dynamic load on the vehicle coupled with measuring the response of die vehicle or of the load of an occupant on a seat also permits a determination of the vehicle's inertial properties and, in the case of the seat weight sensor, of the mass of an occupant and the state of the seat belt (is it buckled and what load is it adding to the seat load sensors).

FIG. 9 illustrates a vehicle passenger compartment, and the engine compartment, with multiple SAW or RFID temperature sensors 85. SAW temperature sensors can be distributed throughout the passenger compartment, such as on the A-pillar, on the B-pillar, on the steering wheel, on the seat, on the ceiling, on the headliner, and on the windshield, rear and side windows and generally in the engine compartment. These sensors, which can be independently coded with different IDs and/or different delays, can provide an accurate measurement of the temperature distribution within the vehicle interior. RFID switches as discussed below can also be used to isolate one device from another. Such a system can be used to tailor the heating and air conditioning system based on the temperature at a particular location in the passenger compartment. If this system is augmented with occupant sensors, then the temperature can be controlled based on seat occupancy and the temperature at that location. If the occupant sensor system is based on ultrasonics, then the temperature measurement system can be used to correct the ultrasonic occupant sensor system for the speed of sound within the passenger compartment. Without such a correction, the error in the sensing system can be as large as about 20 percent.

In one implementation. SAW temperature and other sensors can be made from PVDF film and incorporated within the ultrasonic transducer assembly. For the 40 kHz ultrasonic transducer case, for example, the SAW temperature sensor would return the several pulses sent to drive the ultrasonic transducer to the control circuitry using the same wires used to transmit the pulses to the transducer after a delay that is proportional to the temperature within the transducer housing. Thus, a very economical device can add this temperature sensing function using much of the same hardware that is already present for the occupant sensing system. Since the frequency is low, PVDF could be fabricated into a very low cost temperature sensor for this purpose. Other piezoelectric materials can of course also be used.

Note, the use of PVDF as a piezoelectric material for wired and wireless SAW transducers or sensors is an important disclosure of at least one of the inventions disclosed herein. Such PVDF SAW devices can be used as chemical, biological, temperature, pressure and other SAW sensors as well as for switches. Such devices are very inexpensive to manufacture and are suitable for many vehicle-mounted devices as well as for other non-vehicle-mounted sensors. Disadvantages of PVDF stem from the lower piezoelectric constant (compared with lithium niobate) and the low acoustic wave velocity thus limiting the operating frequency. The key advantage is very low cost. When coupled with plastic electronics (plastic chips), it now becomes very economical to place sensors throughout the vehicle for monitoring a wide range of parameters such as temperature, pressure, chemical concentration etc. In particular implementations, an electronic nose based on SAW or RFID technology and neural networks can be implemented in either a wired or wireless manner for the monitoring of cargo containers or other vehicle interiors (or building interiors) for anti-terrorist or security purposes. See, for example. Reznik, A. M. “Associative Memories for Chemical Sensing”, IEEE 2002 ICONIP, p. 2630-2634, vol. 5. In this manner, other sensors can be combined with the temperature sensors 85, or used separately, to measure carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, alcohol, biological agents, radiation, humidity or other desired chemicals or agents as discussed above. Note, although the examples generally used herein are from the automotive industry, many of the devices disclosed herein can be advantageously used with other vehicles including trucks, boats, airplanes and shipping containers.

The SAW temperature sensors 85 provide the temperature at their mounting location to a processor unit 83 via an interrogator with the processor unit 83 including appropriate control algorithms for controlling the heating and air conditioning system based on the detected temperatures. The processor unit 83 can control, e.g., which vents in the vehicle are open and closed, the flow rate through vents and the temperature of air passing through the vents. In general, the processor unit 83 can control whatever adjustable components are present or form part of the heating and air conditioning system.

In FIG. 9 a child seat 84 is illustrated on the rear vehicle seat. The child seat 84 can be fabricated with one or more RFID tags or SAW tags (not shown). The RFID and SAW tag(s) can be constructed to provide information on the occupancy of the child seat. i.e., whether a child is present, based on the weight, temperature, and/or any other measurable parameter. Also, the mere transmission of waves from the RFID or SAW tag(s) on the child seat 84 would be indicative of the presence of a child seat. The RFID and SAW tag(s) can also be constructed to provide information about the orientation of the child seat 84. i.e., whether it is facing rearward or forward. Such information about the presence and occupancy of the child seat and its orientation can be used in the control of vehicular systems, such as the vehicle airbag system or heating or air conditioning system, especially useful when a child is left in a vehicle. In this case, a processor would control the airbag or HVAC system and would receive information from the RFID and SAW tag(s) via an interrogator.

There are many applications for which knowledge of the pitch and/or roll orientation of a vehicle or other object is desired. An accurate tilt sensor can be constructed using SAW devices. Such a sensor is illustrated in FIG. 10A and designated 86. This sensor 86 can utilize a substantially planar and rectangular mass 87 and four supporting SAW devices 88 which are sensitive to gravity. For example, the mass 87 acts to deflect a membrane on which the SAW device 88 resides thereby straining the SAW device 88. Other properties can also be used for a tilt sensor such as the direction of the earth's magnetic field. SAW devices 88 are shown arranged at the corners of the planar mass 87, but it must be understood that this arrangement is an exemplary embodiment only and not intended to limit the invention. A fifth SAW device 89 can be provided to measure temperature. By comparing the outputs of the four SAW devices 88, the pitch and roll of the automobile can be measured. This sensor 86 can be used to correct errors in the SAW rate gyros described above. If the vehicle has been stationary for a period of time, the yaw SAW rate gyro can initialized to 0 and the pitch and roll SAW gyros initialized to a value determined by the tilt sensor of FIG. 10A. Many other geometries of tilt sensors utilizing one or more SAW devices can now be envisioned for automotive and other applications.

In particular, an alternate preferred configuration is illustrated in FIG. 10B where a triangular geometry is used. In this embodiment, the planar mass is triangular and the SAW devices 88 are arranged at the corners, although as with FIG. 10A, this is a non-limiting, preferred embodiment.

Either of the SAW accelerometers described above can be utilized for crash sensors as shown in FIG. 11. These accelerometers have a substantially higher dynamic range than competing accelerometers now used for crash sensors such as those based on MEMS silicon springs and masses and others based on MEMS capacitive sensing. As discussed above, this is partially a result of the use of frequency or phase shifts which can be measured over a very wide range. Additionally, many conventional accelerometers that are designed for low acceleration ranges are unable to withstand high acceleration shocks without breaking. This places practical limitations on many accelerometer designs so that the stresses in the silicon are not excessive. Also for capacitive accelerometers, there is a narrow limit over which distance, and thus acceleration, can be measured.

The SAW accelerometer for this particular crash sensor design is housed in a container 96 which is assembled into a housing 97 and covered with a cover 98. This particular implementation shows a connector 99 indicating that this sensor would require power and the response would be provided through wires. Alternately, as discussed for other devices above, the connector 99 can be eliminated and the information and power to operate the device transmitted wirelessly. Also, power can be supplied thorough a connector and stored in a capacitor while the information is transmitted wirelessly thus protecting the system from a wire failure during a crash when the sensor is mounted in the crush zone. Such sensors can be used as frontal, side or rear impact sensors. They can be used in the crush zone, in the passenger compartment or any other appropriate vehicle location. If two such sensors are separated and have appropriate sensitive axes, then the angular acceleration of the vehicle can also be determined. Thus, for example, forward-facing accelerometers mounted in the vehicle side doors can be used to measure the yaw acceleration of the vehicle. Alternately, two vertical sensitive axis accelerometers in the side doors can be used to measure the roll acceleration of vehicle, which would be useful for rollover sensing.

U.S. Pat. No. 6,615,656 and the description below provides multiple apparatus for determining the amount of liquid in a tank. Using the SAW pressure devices of this invention, multiple pressure sensors can be placed at appropriate locations within a fuel tank to measure the fluid pressure and thereby determine the quantity of fuel remaining in the tank. This can be done both statically and dynamically. This is illustrated in FIG. 12. In this example, four SAW pressure transducers 100 are placed on the bottom of the fuel tank and one SAW pressure transducer 101 is placed at the top of the fuel tank to eliminate the effects of vapor pressure within tank. Using neural networks, or other pattern recognition techniques, the quantity of fuel in the tank can be accurately determined from these pressure readings in a manner similar to that described the '656 patent and below. The SAW measuring device illustrated in FIG. 12A combines temperature and pressure measurements in a single unit using parallel paths 102 and 103 in the same manner as described above.

FIG. 13A shows a schematic of a prior art airbag module deployment scheme in which sensors, which detect data for use in determining whether to deploy an airbag in the airbag module, are wired to an electronic control unit (ECU) and a command to initiate deployment of the airbag in the airbag module is sent wirelessly. By contrast, as shown in FIG. 13B, in accordance with an invention herein, the sensors are wirelessly connected to the electronic control unit and thus transmit data wirelessly. The ECU is however wired to the airbag module. The ECU could also be connected wirelessly to the airbag module. Alternately, a safety bus can be used in place of the wireless connection.

SAW sensors also have applicability to various other sectors of the vehicle, including the powertrain, chassis, and occupant comfort and convenience. For example, SAW and RFID sensors have applicability to sensors for the powertrain area including oxygen sensors, gear-tooth Hall effect sensors, variable reluctance sensors, digital speed and position sensors, oil condition sensors, rotary position sensors, low pressure sensors, manifold absolute pressure/manifold air temperature (MAP/MAT) sensors, medium pressure sensors, turbo pressure sensors, knock sensors, coolant/fluid temperature sensors, and transmission temperature sensors.

SAW sensors for chassis applications include gear-tooth Hall effect sensors, variable reluctance sensors, digital speed and position sensors, rotary position sensors, non-contact steering position sensors, and digital ABS (anti-lock braking system) sensors. In one implementation, a Hall Effect tire pressure monitor comprises a magnet that rotates with a vehicle wheel and is sensed by a Hall Effect device which is attached to a SAW or RFID device that is wirelessly interrogated. This arrangement eliminates the need to run a wire into each wheel well.

SAW sensors for the occupant comfort and convenience field include low tire pressure sensors. HVAC temperature and humidity sensors, air temperature sensors, and oil condition sensors.

SAW sensors also have applicability such areas as controlling evaporative emissions, transmission shifting, mass air flow meters, oxygen, NOx and hydrocarbon sensors. SAW based sensors are particularly useful in high temperature environments where many other technologies fail.

SAW sensors can facilitate compliance with U.S. regulations concerning evaporative system monitoring in vehicles, through a SAW fuel vapor pressure and temperature sensors that measure fuel vapor pressure within the fuel tank as well as temperature. If vapors leak into the atmosphere, the pressure within the tank drops. The sensor notifies the system of a fuel vapor leak, resulting in a warning signal to the driver and/or notification to a repair facility, vehicle manufacturer and/or compliance monitoring facility. This application is particularly important since the condition within the fuel tank can be ascertained wirelessly reducing the chance of a fuel fire in an accident. The same interrogator that monitors the tire pressure SAW sensors can also monitor the fuel vapor pressure and temperature sensors resulting in significant economies.

A SAW humidity sensor can be used for measuring the relative humidity and the resulting information can be input to the engine management system or the heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) system for more efficient operation. The relative humidity of the air entering an automotive engine impacts the engine's combustion efficiency; i.e., the ability of the spark plugs to ignite the fuel/air mixture in the combustion chamber at the proper time. A SAW humidity sensor in this case can measure the humidity level of the incoming engine air, helping to calculate a more precise fuel/air ratio for improved fuel economy and reduced emissions.

Dew point conditions are reached when the air is fully saturated with water. When the cabin dew point temperature matches the windshield glass temperature, water from the air condenses quickly, creating frost or fog. A SAW humidity sensor with a temperature-sensing element and a window glass-temperature-sensing element can prevent the formation of visible fog formation by automatically controlling the HVAC system.

FIG. 14 illustrates the placement of a variety of sensors, primarily accelerometers and/or gyroscopes, which can be used to diagnose the state of the vehicle itself. Sensor 105 can be located in the headliner or attached to the vehicle roof above the side door. Typically, there can be two such sensors one on either side of the vehicle. Sensor 106 is shown in a typical mounting location midway between the sides of the vehicle attached to or near the vehicle roof above the rear window. Sensor 109 is shown in a typical mounting location in the vehicle trunk adjacent the rear of the vehicle. One, two or three such sensors can be used depending on the application. If three such sensors are used, preferably one would be adjacent each side of vehicle and one in the center. Sensor 107 is shown in a typical mounting location in the vehicle door and sensor 108 is shown in a typical mounting location on the sill or floor below the door. Sensor 110, which can be also multiple sensors, is shown in a typical mounting location forward in the crush zone of the vehicle. Finally, sensor 11 can measure the acceleration of the firewall or instrument panel and is located thereon generally midway between the two sides of the vehicle. If three such sensors are used, one would be adjacent each vehicle side and one in the center. An IMU would serve basically the same functions.

In general, sensors 105-111 provide a measurement of the state of the vehicle, such as its velocity, acceleration, angular orientation or temperature, or a state of the location at which the sensor is mounted. Thus, measurements related to the state of the sensor would include measurements of the acceleration of the sensor, measurements of the temperature of the mounting location as well as changes in the state of the sensor and rates of changes of the state of the sensor. As such, any described use or function of the sensors 105-111 above is merely exemplary and is not intended to limit the form of the sensor or its function. Thus, these sensors may or may not be SAW or RFID sensors and may be powered or unpowered and may transmit their information through a wire harness, a safety or other bus or wirelessly.

Each of the sensors 105-111 may be single axis, double axis or triaxial accelerometers and/or gyroscopes typically of the MEMS type. One or more can be IMUs. These sensors 105-111 can either be wired to the central control module or processor directly wherein they would receive power and transmit information, or they could be connected onto the vehicle bus or, in some cases, using RFID. SAW or similar technology, the sensors can be wireless and would receive their power through RF from one or more interrogators located in the vehicle. In this case, the interrogators can be connected either to the vehicle bus or directly to control module. Alternately, an inductive or capacitive power and/or information transfer system can be used.

One particular implementation will now be described. In this case, each of the sensors 105-111 is a single or dual axis accelerometer. They are made using silicon micromachined technology such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,121,180 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,894,090. These are only representative patents of these devices and there exist more than 100 other relevant U.S. patents describing this technology. Commercially available MEMS gyroscopes such as from Systron Doner have accuracies of approximately one degree per second. In contrast, optical gyroscopes typically have accuracies of approximately one degree per hour. Unfortunately, the optical gyroscopes are believed to be expensive for automotive applications. However, new developments by the current assignee are reducing this cost and such gyroscopes are likely to become cost effective in a few years. On the other hand, typical MEMS gyroscopes are not sufficiently accurate for many control applications unless corrected using location technology such as precise positioning or GPS-based systems as described elsewhere herein.

The angular rate function can be obtained by placing accelerometers at two separated, non-co-located points in a vehicle and using the differential acceleration to obtain an indication of angular motion and angular acceleration. From the variety of accelerometers shown in FIG. 14, it can be appreciated that not only will all accelerations of key parts of the vehicle be determined, but the pitch, yaw and roll angular rates can also be determined based on the accuracy of the accelerometers. By this method, low cost systems can be developed which, although not as accurate as the optical gyroscopes, are considerably more accurate than uncorrected conventional MEMS gyroscopes. Alternately, it has been found that from a single package containing up to three low cost MEMS gyroscopes and three low cost MEMS accelerometers, when carefully calibrated, an accurate inertial measurement unit (IMU) can be constructed that performs as well as units costing a great deal more. Such a package is sold by Crossbow Technology, Inc. 41 Daggett Dr., San Jose, Calif. 95134. If this IMU is combined with a GPS system and sometimes other vehicle sensor inputs using a Kahlan filter, accuracy approaching that of expensive military units can be achieved. One IMU that uses a single device to sense both accelerations in three directions and angular rates about three axis is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,711,125. Although this device has been available for many years, it has not been applied to vehicle sensing and in particular automobile vehicle sensing for location and navigational purposes.

Instead of using two accelerometers at separate locations on the vehicle, a single conformal MEMS-IDT gyroscope may be used. Such a conformal MEMS-IDT gyroscope is described in a paper by V. K. Varadan, “Conformal MEMS-IDT Gyroscopes and Their Comparison With Fiber Optic Gyro”, Proceedings of SPIE Vol. 3990 (2000). The MEMS-IDT gyroscope is based on the principle of surface acoustic wave (SAW) standing waves on a piezoelectric substrate. A surface acoustic wave resonator is used to create standing waves inside a cavity and the particles at the anti-nodes of the standing waves experience large amplitude of vibrations, which serves as the reference vibrating motion for the gyroscope. Arrays of metallic dots are positioned at the anti-node locations so that the effect of Coriolis force due to rotation will acoustically amplify the magnitude of the waves. Unlike other MEMS gyroscopes, the MEMS-IDT gyroscope has a planar configuration with no suspended resonating mechanical structures. Other SAW-based gyroscopes are also now under development.

The system of FIG. 14 using dual axis accelerometers, or the IMU Kalman filter system, therefore provides a complete diagnostic system of the vehicle itself and its dynamic motion. Such a system is far more accurate than any system currently available in the automotive market. This system provides very accurate crash discrimination since the exact location of the crash can be determined and, coupled with knowledge of the force deflection characteristics of the vehicle at the accident impact site, an accurate determination of the crash severity and thus the need for occupant restraint deployment can be made. Similarly, the tendency of a vehicle to rollover can be predicted in advance and signals sent to the vehicle steering, braking and throttle systems to attempt to ameliorate the rollover situation or prevent it. In the event that it cannot be prevented, the deployment side curtain airbags can be initiated in a timely manner. Additionally, the tendency of the vehicle to the slide or skid can be considerably more accurately determined and again the steering, braking and throttle systems commanded to minimize the unstable vehicle behavior. Thus, through the deployment of inexpensive accelerometers at a variety of locations in the vehicle, or the IMU Kalman filter system, significant improvements are made in vehicle stability control, crash sensing, rollover sensing and resulting occupant protection technologies.

As mentioned above, the combination of the outputs from these accelerometer sensors and the output of strain gage weight sensors in a vehicle seat, or in or on a support structure of the seat, can be used to make an accurate assessment of the occupancy of the seat and differentiate between animate and inanimate occupants as well as determining where in the seat the occupants are sitting. This can be done by observing the acceleration signals from the sensors of FIG. 14 and simultaneously the dynamic strain gage measurements from seat-mounted strain gages. The accelerometers provide the input function to the seat and the strain gages measure the reaction of the occupying item to the vehicle acceleration and thereby provide a method of determining dynamically the mass of the occupying item and its location. This is particularly important during occupant position sensing during a crash event. By combining the outputs of the accelerometers and the strain gages and appropriately processing the same, the mass and weight of an object occupying the seat can be determined as well as the gross motion of such an object so that an assessment can be made as to whether the object is a life form such as a human being.

For this embodiment, a sensor, not shown, that can be one or more strain gage weight sensors, is mounted on the seat or in connection with the seat or its support structure. Suitable mounting locations and forms of weight sensors are discussed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,242,701 and contemplated for use in the inventions disclosed herein as well. The mass or weight of the occupying item of the seat can thus be measured based on the dynamic measurement of the strain gages with optional consideration of the measurements of accelerometers on the vehicle, which are represented by any of sensors 105-111.

A SAW Pressure Sensor can also be used with bladder weight sensors permitting that device to be interrogated wirelessly and without the need to supply power. Similarly, a SAW device can be used as a general switch in a vehicle and in particular as a seatbelt buckle switch indicative of seatbelt use. SAW devices can also be used to measure seatbelt tension or the acceleration of the seatbelt adjacent to the chest or other part of the occupant and used to control the occupant's acceleration during a crash. Such systems can be boosted as disclosed herein or not as required by the application. These inventions are disclosed in patents and patent applications of the current assignee.

The operating frequency of SAW devices has hereto for been limited to less that about 500 MHz due to problems in lithography resolution, which of course is constantly improving and currently SAW devices based on lithium niobate are available that operate at 2.4 GHz. This lithography problem is related to the speed of sound in the SAW material. Diamond has the highest speed of sound and thus would be an ideal SAW material. However, diamond is not piezoelectric. This problem can be solved partially by using a combination or laminate of diamond and a piezoelectric material. Recent advances in the manufacture of diamond films that can be combined with a piezoelectric material such as lithium niobate promise to permit higher frequencies to be used since the spacing between the interdigital transducer (IDT) fingers can be increased for a given frequency. A particularly attractive frequency is 2.4 GHz or Wi-Fi as the potential exists for the use of more sophisticated antennas such as the Yagi antenna or the Motia smart antenna that have more gain and directionality. In a different development, SAW devices have been demonstrated that operate in the tens of GHz range using a novel stacking method to achieve the close spacing of the IDTs.

In a related invention, the driver can be provided with a keyless entry device, other RFID tag, smart card or cell phone with an RF transponder that can be powerless in the form of an RFID or similar device, which can also be boosted as described herein. The interrogator determines the proximity of the driver to the vehicle door or other similar object such as a building or house door or vehicle trunk. As shown in FIG. 15A, if a driver 118 remains within 1 meter, for example, from the door or trunk lid 116, for example, for a time period such as 5 seconds, then the door or trunk lid 116 can automatically unlock and ever open in some implementations. Thus, as the driver 118 approaches the trunk with his or her arms filled with packages 117 and pauses, the trunk can automatically open (see FIG. 15B). Such a system would be especially valuable for older people. Naturally, this system can also be used for other systems in addition to vehicle doors and trunk lids.

As shown in FIG. 15C, an interrogator 115 is placed on the vehicle, e.g., in the trunk 112 as shown, and transmits waves. When the keyless entry device 113, which contains an antenna 114 and a circuit including a circulator 135 and a memory containing a unique ID code 136, is a set distance from the interrogator 115 for a certain duration of time, the interrogator 115 directs a trunk opening device 137 to open the trunk lid 116

A SAW device can also be used as a wireless switch as shown in FIGS. 16A and 16B. FIG. 16A illustrates a surface 120 containing a projection 122 on top of a SAW device 121. Surface material 120 could be, for example, the armrest of an automobile, the steering wheel airbag cover, or any other surface within the passenger compartment of an automobile or elsewhere. Projection 122 will typically be a material capable of transmitting force to the surface of SAW device 121. As shown in FIG. 20B, a projection 123 may be placed on top of the SAW device 124. This projection 123 permits force exerted on the projection 122 to create a pressure on the SAW device 124. This increased pressure changes the time delay or natural frequency of the SAW wave traveling on the surface of material. Alternately, it can affect the magnitude of the returned signal. The projection 123 is typically held slightly out of contact with the surface until forced into contact with it.

An alternate approach is to place a switch across the IDT 127 as shown in FIG. 16C. If switch 125 is open, then the device will not return a signal to the interrogator. If it is closed, than the IDT 127 will act as a reflector sending a signal back to IDT 128 and thus to the interrogator. Alternately, a switch 126 can be placed across the SAW device. In this case, a switch closure shorts the SAW device and no signal is returned to the interrogator. For the embodiment of FIG. 16C, using switch 126 instead of switch 125, a standard reflector IDT would be used in place of the IDT 127.

Most SAW-based accelerometers work on the principle of straining the SAW surface and thereby changing either the time delay or natural frequency of the system. An alternate novel accelerometer is illustrated FIG. 17A wherein a mass 130 is attached to a silicone rubber coating 131 which has been applied the SAW device. Acceleration of the mass in FIG. 17A in the direction of arrow X changes the amount of rubber in contact with the surface of the SAW device and thereby changes the damping, natural frequency or the time delay of the device. By this method, accurate measurements of acceleration below 1 G are readily obtained. Furthermore, this device can withstand high deceleration shocks without damage. FIG. 17B illustrates a more conventional approach where the strain in a beam 132 caused by the acceleration acting on a mass 133 is measured with a SAW strain sensor 134.

It is important to note that all of these devices have a high dynamic range compared with most competitive technologies. In some cases, this dynamic range can exceed 100,000 and up to 1,000,000 has been reported. This is the direct result of the case with which frequency and phase can be accurately measured.

A gyroscope, which is suitable for automotive applications, is illustrated in FIG. 18 and described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,516,665. This SAW-based gyroscope has applicability for the vehicle navigation, dynamic control, and rollover sensing among others.

Note that any of the disclosed applications can be interrogated by the central interrogator of this invention and can either be powered or operated powerlessly as described in general above. Block diagrams of three interrogators suitable for use in this invention are illustrated in FIGS. 19A-19C. FIG. 19A illustrates a super heterodyne circuit and FIG. 19B illustrates a dual super heterodyne circuit. FIG. 19C operates as follows. During the burst time two frequencies, F1 and F1+F2, are sent by the transmitter after being generated by mixing using oscillator Osc. The two frequencies are needed by the SAW transducer where they are mixed yielding F2 which is modulated by the SAW and contains the information. Frequency (F1+F2) is sent only during the burst time while frequency F1 remains on until the signal F2 returns from the SAW. This signal is used for mixing. The signal returned from the SAW transducer to the interrogator is F1+F2 where F2 has been modulated by the SAW transducer. It is expected that the mixing operations will result in about 12 db loss in signal strength.

As discussed, theoretically a SAW can be used for any sensing function provided the surface across which the acoustic wave travels can be modified in terms of its length, mass, elastic properties or any property that affects the travel distance, speed, amplitude or damping of the surface wave. Thus, gases and vapors can be sensed through the placement of a layer on the SAW that absorbs the gas or vapor, for example (a chemical sensor or electronic nose). Similarly, a radiation sensor can result through the placement of a radiation sensitive coating on the surface of the SAW.

Normally, a SAW device is interrogated with a constant amplitude and frequency RF pulse. This need not be the case and a modulated pulse can also be used. If for example a pseudorandom or code modulation is used, then a SAW interrogator can distinguish its communication from that of another vehicle that may be in the vicinity. This doesn't totally solve the problem of interrogating a tire that is on an adjacent vehicle but it does solve the problem of the interrogator being confused by the transmission from another interrogator. This confusion can also be partially solved if the interrogator only listens for a return signal based on when it expects that signal to be present based on when it sent the signal. That expectation can be based on the physical location of the tire relative to the interrogator which is unlikely to come from a tire on an adjacent vehicle which only momentarily could be at an appropriate distance from the interrogator. The interrogator would of course need to have correlation software in order to be able to differentiate the relevant signals. The correlation technique also permits the interrogator to separate the desired signals from noise thereby improving the sensitivity of the correlator. An alternate approach as discussed elsewhere herein is to combine a SAW sensor with an RFID switch where the switch is programmed to open or close based on the receipt of the proper identification code.

As discussed elsewhere herein, the particular lire that is sending a signal can be determined if multiple antennas, such as three, each receive the signal. For a 500 MHz signal, for example, the wave length is about 60 cm. If the distance from a tire transmitter to each of three antennas is on the order of one meter, then the relative distance from each antenna to the transmitter can be determined to within a few centimeters and thus the location of the transmitter can be found by triangulation. If that location is not a possible location for a tire transmitter, then the data can be ignored thus solving the problem of a transmitter from an adjacent vehicle being read by the wrong vehicle interrogator. This will be discussed below with regard to solving the problem of a truck having 18 tires that all need to be monitored. Note also, each antenna can have associated with it some simple circuitry that permits it to receive a signal, amplify it, change its frequency and retransmit it either through a wire of through the air to the interrogator thus eliminating the need for long and expensive coax cables.

U.S. Pat. No. 6,622,567 describes a peak strain RFID technology based device with the novelty being the use of a mechanical device that records the peak strain experienced by the device. Like the system of the invention herein, the system does not require a battery and receives its power from the RFID circuit. The invention described herein includes the me of RFID based sensors either in the peak strain mode or in the preferred continuous strain mode. This invention is not limited to measuring strain as SAW and RFID based sensors can be used for measuring many other parameters including chemical vapor concentration, temperature, acceleration, angular velocity etc.

A key aspect of at least one of the inventions disclosed herein is the use of an interrogator to wirelessly interrogate multiple sensing devices thereby reducing the cost of the system since such sensors are in general inexpensive compared to the interrogator. The sensing devices are preferably based of SAW and/or RFID technologies although other technologies are applicable.

1.3.1 Antenna Considerations

Antennas are a very important aspect to SAW and RFID wireless devices such as can be used in tire monitors, seat monitors, weight sensors, child seat monitors, fluid level sensors and similar devices or sensors which monitor, detect, measure, determine or derive physical properties or characteristics of a component in or on the vehicle or of an area near the vehicle, as disclosed in the current assignee's patents and pending patent applications. In many cases, the location of a SAW or RFID device needs to be determined such as when a device is used to locate the position of a movable item in or on a vehicle such as a seat. In other cases, the particular device from a plurality of similar devices, such as a tire pressure and/or temperature monitor that is reporting, needs to be identified. Thus, a combination of antennas can be used and the time or arrival, angle of arrival, multipath signature or similar method used to identify the reporting device. One preferred method is derived from the theory of smart antennas whereby the signals from multiple antennas are combined to improve the signal-to-noise ratio of the incoming or outgoing signal in the presence of multipath effects, for example.

Additionally, since the signal level from a SAW or RFID device is frequently low, various techniques can be used to improve the signal-to-noise ratio as described below. Finally, at the frequencies frequently used such as 433 MHz, the antennas can become large and methods are needed to reduce their size. These and other antenna considerations that can be used to improve the operation of SAW, RFID and similar wireless devices are described below.

1.3.1.1 Tire Information Determination

One method of maintaining a single central antenna assembly while interrogating all four tires on a conventional automobile, is illustrated in FIGS. 20A and 20B. An additional antenna can be located near the spare tire, which is not shown. It should be noted that the system described below is equally applicable for vehicles with more than four tires such as trucks.

A vehicle body is illustrated as 620 having four tires 621 and a centrally mounted four element, switchable directional antenna array 622. The four beams are shown schematically as 623 with an inactivated beam as 624 and the activated beam as 625. The road surface 626 supports the vehicle. An electronic control circuit, not shown, which may reside inside the antenna array housing 622 or elsewhere, alternately switches each of the four antennas of the array 622 which then sequentially, or in some other pattern, send RP signals to each of the four tires 621 and wait for the response from the RFID, SAW or similar tire pressure, temperature, ID, acceleration and/or other property monitor arranged in connection with or associated with the tire 621. This represents a time domain multiple access system.

The interrogator makes sequential interrogation of wheels as follows:

Stage 1. Interrogator radiates 8 RF pulses via the first RF port directed to the 1st wheel.

Pulse duration is about 0.8 μs.

Pulse repetition period is about 40 μs.

Pulse amplitude is about 8 V (peak to peak)

Carrier frequency is about 426.00 MHz.

(Of course, between adjacent pulses receiver opens its input and receives four-pulses echoes from transponder located in the first wheel).

Then, during a time of about 8 ms internal micro controller processes and stores received data.

Total duration of this stage is 32 μs+8 ms=8.032 ms.

Stage 2, 3, 4. Interrogator repeats operations as on stage 1 for 2^(nd), 3^(rd), and 4^(th) wheel sequentially via appropriate RF ports.

Stage 5. Interrogator stops radiating RF pulses and transfers data stored during stages 1-4 to the external PC for final processing and displaying. Then it returns to stage 1. The time interval for data transfer equals about 35 ms.

Some Notes Relative to FCC Regulations:

The total duration of interrogation cycle of four wheels is 8.032 ms*4+35 ms=67.12 ms.

During this time, interrogator radiates 8*4=32 pulses, each of 0.8 μs duration.

Thus, average period of pulse repetition is 67.12 ms/32=2.09 ms=2090 μs

-   -   Assuming that duration of the interrogation pulse is 0.8 μs as         mentioned, an average repetition rate is obtained         0.8 μs/2090 μs=0.38*10⁻³

Finally, the radiated pulse power is Pp=(4 V)²/(2*50 Ohm)=0.16 W

and the average radiated power is Pave=0.16*0.38*10⁻³=0.42*10⁻³ W, or 0.42 mW

In another application, the antennas of the array 622 transmit the RF signals simultaneously and space the returns through the use of a delay line in the circuitry from each antenna so that each return is spaced in time in a known manner without requiring that the antennas be switched. Another method is to offset the antenna array, as illustrated in FIG. 21, so that the returns naturally are spaced in time due to the different distances from the tires 621 to the antennas of the array 622. In this case, each signal will return with a different phase and can be separated by this difference in phase using methods known to those in the art.

In another application, not shown, two wide angle antennas can be used such that each receives any four signals but each antenna receives each signal at a slightly different time and different amplitude permitting each signal to be separated by looking at the return from both antennas since, each signal will be received differently based on its angle of arrival.

Additionally, each SAW or RFID device can be designed to operate on a slightly different frequency and the antennas of the array 622 can be designed to send a chirp signal and the returned signals will then be separated in frequency, permitting the four signals to be separated. Alternately, the four antennas of the array 622 can each transmit an identification signal to permit separation. This identification can be a numerical number or the length of the SAW substrate, for example, can be random so that each property monitor has a slightly different delay built in which permits signal separation. The identification number can be easily achieved in RFID systems and, with some difficulty and added expense, in SAW systems. Other methods of separating the signals from each of the tires 621 will now be apparent to those skilled in the art. One preferred method in particular will be discussed below and makes use of an RFID switch.

There are two parameters of SAW system, which has led to the choice of a four echo pulse system:

-   -   ITU frequency rules require that the radiated spectrum width be         reduced to:         -   Δφ*1.75 MHz (in ISM band, F=433.92 MHz);     -   The range of temperature measurement should be from −40 F up to         +260 F.

Therefore, burst (request) pulse duration should be not less than 0.6 microseconds (see FIG. 22). τ_(bur.)=1/Δφ≧0.6 μs

This burst pulse travels to a SAW sensor and then it is returned by the SAW to the interrogator. The sensor's antenna, interdigital transducer (IDT), reflector and the interrogator are subsystems with a restricted frequency pass band. Therefore, an efficient pass band of all the subsystems H(f)_(Σ) will be defined as product of the partial frequency characteristic of all components: H(f)_(Σ) =H(f)₁ *H(f)₂ * . . . H(f)i

On the other hand, the frequency H(φ)_(Σ) and a time I(τ)_(Σ) response of any system are interlinked to each other by Fourier's transform. Therefore, the shape and duration (τ_(echo puls)) an echo signal on input to the quadrature demodulator will differ from an interrogation pulse (see FIG. 23).

In other words, duration an echo signal on input to the quadrature demodulator is defined as mathematical convolution of a burst signal τ_(bur.) and the total impulse response of the system I(τ)_(Σ). τ_(echo)=τ_(bur.)

I(τ)_(Σ).

The task is to determine maximum pulse duration on input to the quadrature demodulator τ_(echo) under a burst pulse duration τ_(bur) of 0.6 microseconds. It is necessary to consider in time all echo signals. In addition, it is necessary to take into account the following:

-   -   each subsequent echo signal should not begin earlier than the         completion of the previous echo pulse. Otherwise, the signals         will interfere with each other, and measurement will not be         correct;     -   for normal operation of available microcircuits, it is necessary         that the signal has a flat apex with a duration not less than         0.25 microseconds (τ_(meg)=t3−t2, see FIG. 23). The signal's         phase will be constant only on this segment;     -   the total sensor's pass band (considering double transit IDT and         its antenna as a reflector) constitutes 10 MHz;     -   the total pass band of the interrogator constitutes no more than         4 MHz.

Conducting the corresponding calculations yields the determination that duration of impulse front (t2−t1=t4−t3, see FIG. 23) constitutes about 0.35 microseconds. Therefore, total duration of one echo pulse is not less than: τ_(echo.)=(t2−t1)+τ_(meg.)+(t4−t3)=0.35+0.25+0.35=0.95 μs

Hence, the arrival time of each following echo pulse should be not earlier than 1.0 microsecond (see FIG. 24). This conclusion is very important.

In Appendix 1 of the '139 application, it is shown that for correct temperature measuring in the required band it is necessary to meet the following conditions: (T2−T1)−1/(72*10−61/° K.*(125° C.−(−40° C.))*434.92*106)=194 ns

This condition is outrageous. If to execute ITU frequency rules, the band of correct temperature measuring will be reduced five times: (125° C.−(−40° C.)*194 ns)/1000 ns=32° C.−58° F.

This is the main reason that it is necessary to add the fourth echo pulse in a sensor (see FIG. 24). The principle purpose of the fourth echo pulse is to make the temperature measurement unambiguous in a wide interval of temperatures when a longer interrogation pulse is used (the respective time intervals between the sensor's echo pulses are also longer). A mathematical model of the processing of a four-pulse echo that explains these statements is presented in Appendix 3 of the '139 application.

The duration of the interrogation pulse and the time positions of the four pulses are calculated as: T1>4*τ_(echo)=4.00 μs T2=T1+τ_(echo)=5.00 μs T3=T2+τ_(echo)=6.00 μs T4=T3+τ_(echo)+0.08 μs=7.08 μs

The sensor's design with four pulses is exhibited in FIG. 25 and FIG. 26.

τ_(bur) 0.60 μs T1 4.00 μs T2 5.00 μs T3 6.00 μs T4 7.08 μs

The reason that such a design was selected is that this design provides three important conditions:

1. It has the minimum RF signal propagation loss. Both SAW waves use for measuring (which are propagated to the left and to the right from IDT).

2. All parasitic echo signals (signals of multiple transits) are eliminated after the fourth pulse. For example, the pulse is excited by the ID

, then it is reflected from a reflector No1 and returns to the IDT. The pulse for the second time is re-emitted and it passes the second time on the same trajectory. The total time delay will be 8.0 microseconds in this case.

3. It has the minimum length.

FIGS. 25-27 illustrate the paths taken by various surface waves on a tire temperature and pressure monitoring device of one or more of the inventions disclosed herein. The pulse form the interrogator is received by the antenna 634 which excited a wave in the SAW substrate 637 by way of the interdigital transducer (IDT) 633. The pulse travels in two directions and reflects off of reflectors 631, 632, 635 and 636. The reflected pulses return to the IDT 633 and are re-radiated from the antenna 634 back to the interrogator. The pressure in the pressure capsule causes the micro-membrane 638 to deflect causing the membrane to strain in the SAW through the point of application of the force 639.

The IDT 633, reflectors 632 and 631 are rigidly fastened to a base package. Reflectors 635 and 636 are disposed on a portion of the substrate that moves under the action of changes in pressure. Therefore, it is important that magnitudes of phase shift of pulses No2 and No4 were equal for a particular pressure.

For this purpose, the point of application of the force (caused by pressure) has been arranged between reflector 635 and the IDT 633, as it is exhibited in FIG. 27. Phase shifts of echo pulses No2 and No4 vary equally with changes in pressure. The area of strain is equal for echo pulses No2 and No4. Phase shifts of echo pulses No1 and No4 do not vary with pressure.

The phase shifts of all four echo pulses vary under temperature changes (proportionally to each time delay). All necessary computing of the temperature and pressure can be executed without difficulties in this case only.

This is taken into account in a math model, which is presented below.

Although the discussion herein concerns the determination of tire information, the same system can be used to determine the location of seats, the location of child seats when equipped with sensors, information about the presence of object or chemicals in vehicular compartments and the like.

1.3.1.2 Smart Antennas

Some of the shortcomings in today's wireless products can be overcome by using smart antenna technology. A smart antenna is a multi-element antenna that significantly improves reception by intelligently combining the signals received at each antenna element and adjusting the antenna characteristics to optimize performance as the transmitter or receiver moves and the environment changes.

Smart antennas can suppress interfering signals, combat signal fading and increase signal range thereby increasing the performance and capacity of wireless systems.

A method of separating signals from multiple tires, for example, is to use a smart antenna such as that manufactured by Motia. This particular Motia device is designed to operate at 433 MHz and to mitigate multipath signals at that frequency. The signals returning to the antennas from tires, for example, contain some multipath effects that, especially if the antennas are offset somewhat from the vehicle center, are different for each wheel. Since the adaptive formula will differ for each wheel, the signals can be separated (see “enhancing 802.11 WLANs through Smart Antennas”, January 2004 available at motia.com). The following is taken from that paper.

“Antenna arrays can provide gain, combat multipath fading, and suppress interfering signals, thereby increasing both the performance and capacity of wireless systems. Smart antennas have been implemented in a wide variety of wireless systems, where they have been demonstrated to provide a large performance improvement. However, the various types of spatial processing techniques have different advantages and disadvantages in each type of system.”

“This strategy permits the seamless integration of smart antenna technology with today's legacy WLAN chipset architecture. Since the 802.11 system uses time division duplexing (the same frequency is used for transmit and receive), smart antennas can be used for both transmit and receive, providing a gain on both uplink and downlink, using smart antennas on either the client or access point alone. Results show a 13 dB gain with a four element smart antenna over a single antenna system with the smart antenna on one side only, and an 18 dB gain with the smart antenna on both the client and access point Thus, this “plug-and-play” adaptive array technology can provide greater range, average data rate increases per user, and better overall coverage.

“In the multibeam or phased array antenna, a beamformer forms several narrow beams, and a beam selector chooses the beam for reception that has the largest signal power. In the adaptive array, the signal is received by several antenna elements, each with similar antenna patterns, and the received signals are weighted and combined to form the output signal. The multibeam antenna is simpler to implement as the beamformer is fixed, with the beam selection only needed every few seconds for user movement, while the adaptive array must calculate the complex beamforming weights at least an order of magnitude faster than the fading rate, which can be several Hertz for pedestrian users.”

“Finally, there is pattern diversity, the use of antenna elements with different patterns. The combination of these types of diversity permits the use of a large number of antennas even in a small form factor, such as a PCMCIA card or handset, with near ideal performance.”

Through its adaptive beamforming technology, Motia has developed cost-effective smart antenna appliqués that vastly improve wireless performance in a wide variety of wireless applications including Wi-Fi that can be incorporated into wireless systems without major modifications to existing products. Although the Motia chipset has been applied to several communication applications, it has yet to be applied to the monitoring applications as disclosed in the current assignee's patents and pending patent applications, and in particular vehicular monitoring applications such as tire monitoring.

The smart antenna works by determining a set of factors or weights that are used to operate on the magnitude and/or phase of the signals from each antenna before the signals are combined. However, since the geometry of a vehicle tire relative to the centralized antenna array does not change much as the tire rotates, but is different for each wheel, the weights themselves contain the information as to which tire signal is being received. In fact, the weights can be chosen to optimize signal transmission from a particular tire thus providing a method of selectively interrogating each tire at the maximum antenna gain.

1.3.1.3 Distributed Load Monopole

Recent antenna developments in the physics department at the University of Rhode Island have resulted in a new antenna technology. The antennas developed called DLM's (Distributed loaded monopole) are small efficient, wide bandwidth antennas. The simple design exhibits 50-ohm impedance and is easy to implement. They require only a direct feed from a coax cable and require no elaborate matching networks.

The prime advantage to this technology is a substantial reduction of the size of an antenna. Typically, the DLM antenna is about ⅓ the size of a normal dipole with only minor loss in efficiency. This is especially important for vehicle applications where space is always at a premium. Such antennas can be used for a variety of vehicle radar and communication applications as well for the monitoring of RFID, SAW and similar devices on a vehicle and especially for tire pressure, temperature, and/or acceleration monitoring as well as other monitoring purposes. Such applications have not previously been disclosed.

Although the DLM is being applied to several communication applications, it has yet to be applied to the monitoring applications as disclosed in the current assignee's patents and pending patent applications. The antenna gain that results and the ability to pack several antennas into a small package are attractive features of this technology.

1.3.1.4 Plasma Antenna

The following disclosure was taken from “Markland Technologies—Gas Plasma”: (www.marklandtech.com)

“Plasma antenna technology employs ionized gas enclosed in a tube (or other enclosure) as the conducting element of an antenna. This is a fundamental change from traditional antenna design that generally employs solid metal wires as the conducting element. Ionized gas is an efficient conducting element with a number of important advantages. Since the gas is ionized only for the time of transmission or reception, “ringing” and associated effects of solid wire antenna design are eliminated. The design allows for extremely short pulses, important to many forms of digital communication and radars. The design further provides the opportunity to construct an antenna that can be compact and dynamically reconfigured for frequency, direction, bandwidth, gain and beamwidth. Plasma antenna technology will enable antennas to be designed that are efficient, low in weight and smaller in size than traditional solid wire antennas.”

“When gas is electrically charged, or ionized to a plasma state it becomes conductive, allowing radio frequency (RF) signals to be transmitted or received. We employ ionized gas enclosed in a tube as the conducting element of an antenna. When the gas is not ionized, the antenna element ceases to exist. This is a fundamental change from traditional antenna design that generally employs solid metal wires as the conducting element. We believe our plasma antenna offers numerous advantages including stealth for military applications and higher digital performance in commercial applications. We also believe our technology can compete in many metal antenna applications.”

“Initial studies have concluded that a plasma antenna's performance is equal to a copper wire antenna in every respect. Plasma antennas can be used for any transmission and/or modulation technique: continuous wave (CW), phase modulation, impulse, AM, FM, chirp, spread spectrum or other digital techniques. And the plasma antenna can be used over a large frequency range up to 20 GHz and employ a wide variety of gases (for example neon, argon, helium, krypton, mercury vapor and xenon). The same is true as to its value as a receive antenna.”

“Plasma antenna technology has the following additional attributes:

-   -   No antenna ringing provides an improved signal to noise ratio         and reduces multipath signal distortion.     -   Reduced radar cross section provides stealth due to the         non-metallic elements.     -   Changes in the ion density can result in instantaneous changes         in bandwidth over wide dynamic ranges.     -   After the gas is ionized, the plasma antenna has virtually no         noise floor.     -   While in operation, a plasma antenna with a low ionization level         can be decoupled from an adjacent high-frequency transmitter.     -   A circular scan can be performed electronically with no moving         parts at a higher speed than traditional mechanical antenna         structures.     -   It has been mathematically illustrated that by selecting the         gases and changing ion density that the electrical aperture (or         apparent footprint) of a plasma antenna can be made to perform         on par with a metal counterpart having a larger physical size.     -   Our plasma antenna can transmit and receive from the same         aperture provided the frequencies are widely separated.     -   Plasma resonance, impedance and electron charge density are all         dynamically reconfigurable. Ionized gas antenna elements can be         constructed and configured into an array that is dynamically         reconfigurable for frequency, beamwidth, power, gain,         polarization and directionality—on die fly.     -   A single dynamic antenna structure can use time multiplexing so         that many RF subsystems can share one antenna resource reducing         the number and size of antenna structures.”

Several of the characteristics discussed above are of particular usefulness for several of the inventions herein including the absence of ringing, the ability to turn the antenna off after transmission and then immediately back on for reception, the ability to send very short pulses, the ability to alter the directionality of the antenna and to sweep thereby allowing one antenna to service multiple devices such as tires and to know which tire is responding. Additional advantages include, smaller size, the ability to work with chirp, spread spectrum and other digital technologies, improved signal to noise ratio, wide dynamic range, circular scanning without moving parts, and antenna sharing over differing frequencies, among others.

Some of the applications disclosed herein can use ultra wideband transceivers. UWB transceivers radiate most of the energy with its frequency centered on the physical length of the antenna. With the UWB connected to a plasma antenna, the center frequency of the UWB transceiver could be hopped or swept simultaneously.

A plasma antenna can solve the problem of multiple antennas by changing its electrical characteristic to match the function required—Time domain multiplexed. It can be used for high-gain antennas such as phase array, parabolic focus steering, log periodic, yogi, patch quadrafiler, etc. One antenna can be used for GPS, ad-hoc (such as car-to-car) communication, collision avoidance, back up sensing, cruse control, radar, toll identification and data communications.

Although the plasma antennas are being applied to several communication applications, they have yet to be applied to the monitoring applications as disclosed herein. The many advantages that result and the ability to pack several antenna functions into a small package are attractive features of this technology. Patents and applications that discuss plasma antennas include: U.S. Pat. No. 6,710,746, US20030160742 and US20040130497.

1.3.1.5 Dielectric Antenna

A great deal of work is underway to make antennas from dielectric materials. In one case, the electric field that impinges on the dielectric is used to modulate a transverse electric light beam. In another case, the reduction of the speed of electro magnetic waves due to the dielectric constant is used to reduce the size of the antenna. It can be expected that developments in this area will affect the antennas used in cell phones as well as in RFID and SAW-based communication devices in the future. Thus, dielectric antennas can be advantageously used with some of the inventions disclosed herein.

1.3.1.6 Nanotube Antenna

Antennas made from carbon nanotubes are beginning to show promise of increasing the sensitivity of antennas and thus increasing the range for communication devices based on RFID, SAW or similar devices where the signal strength frequently limits the range of such devices. The use of these antennas is therefore contemplated herein for use in tire monitors and the other applications disclosed herein.

Combinations of the above antenna designs in many cases can benefit from the advantages of each type to add further improvements to the field. Thus the inventions herein are not limited to any one of the above concepts nor is it limited to their use alone. Where feasible, all combinations are contemplated herein.

1.3.1.7 Summary

A general system for obtaining information about a vehicle or a component thereof or therein is illustrated in FIG. 20C and includes multiple sensors 627 which may be arranged at specific locations on the vehicle, on specific components of the vehicle, on objects temporarily placed in the vehicle such as child seats, or on or in any other object in or on the vehicle or in its vicinity about which information is desired. The sensors 627 may be SAW or RFID sensors or other sensors which generate a return signal upon the detection of a transmitted radio frequency signal. A multi-element antenna array 622 is mounted on the vehicle, in either a central location as shown in FIG. 20A or in an offset location as shown in FIG. 21, to provide the radio frequency signals which cause the sensors 627 to generate the return signals.

A control system 628 is coupled to the antenna array 622 and controls the antennas in the array 622 to be operative as necessary to enable reception of return signals from the sensors 627. There are several ways for the control system 628 to control the array 622, including to cause the antennas to be alternately switched on in order to sequentially transmit the RF signals therefrom and receive the return signals from the sensors 627 and to cause the antennas to transmit the RF signals simultaneously and space the return signals from the sensors 627 via a delay line in circuitry from each antennas such that each return signal is spaced in time in a known manner without requiring switching of the antennas. The control system can also be used to control a smart antenna array.

The control system 628 also processes the return signals to provide information about the vehicle or the component. The processing of the return signals can be any known processing including the use of pattern recognition techniques, neural networks, fuzzy systems and the like.

The antenna array 622 and control system 628 can be housed in a common antenna array housing 630.

Once the information about the vehicle or the component is known, it is directed to a display/telematics/adjustment unit 629 where the information can be displayed on a display 629 to the driver, sent to a remote location for analysis via a telematics unit 629 and/or used to control or adjust a component on, in or near the vehicle. Although several of the figures illustrate applications of these technologies to tire monitoring, it is intended that the principles and devices disclosed can be applied to the monitoring of a wide variety of components on aid off a vehicle.

1.4 Tire Monitoring

Tire monitoring sensors may be one type of sensor systems used in a control system and method disclosed herein. Significant details about specific tire monitoring sensor systems is set forth in the parent application, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/464,288 (Section 1.4 thereof) and is incorporated herein.

1.5 Occupant Sensing

Occupant or object presence and position sensing is another field in which SAW and/or RFID technology can be applied and the inventions herein encompasses several embodiments of SAW and RFID occupant or object presence and/or position sensors.

Many sensing systems are available to identify and locate occupants or other objects in a passenger compartment of the vehicle. Such sensors include ultrasonic sensors, chemical sensors (e.g., carbon dioxide), cameras and other optical sensors, radar systems, heat and other infrared sensors, capacitance, magnetic or other field change sensors, etc. Most of these sensors require power to operate and return information to a central processor for analysis. An ultrasonic sensor, for example, may be mounted in or near the headliner of the vehicle and periodically it transmits a burst of ultrasonic waves and receives reflections of these waves from occupying items of the passenger seat. Current systems on the market are controlled by electronics in a dedicated ECU.

FIG. 28 is a side view, with parts cutaway and removed of a vehicle showing the passenger compartment containing a rear-facing child seat 342 on a front passenger seat 343 and one mounting location for a first embodiment of a vehicle interior monitoring system in accordance with the invention. The interior monitoring system is capable of detecting the presence of an object, determining the type of object, determining the location of the object, and/or determining another property or characteristic of the object. A property of the object could be the presence or orientation of a child seat, the velocity of an adult and the like. For example, the vehicle interior monitoring system can determine that an object is present on the sent, that the object is a child seat and that the child seat is rear-facing. The vehicle interior monitoring system could also determine that the object is an adult, that he is drunk and that he is out-of-position relative to the airbag.

In this embodiment, six transducers 344, 345, 346, 347, 348 and 349 are used, although any number of transducers may be used. Each transducer 344, 345, 346, 347, 348, 349 may comprise only a transmitter which transmits energy, waves or radiation, only a receiver which receives energy, waves or radiation, both a transmitter and a receiver capable of transmitting and receiving energy, waves or radiation, an electric field sensor, a capacitive sensor, or a self-tuning antenna-based sensor, weight sensor, chemical sensor, motion sensor or vibration sensor, for example.

Such transducers or receivers 344-349 may be of the type which emit or receive a continuous signal, a time varying signal (such as a capacitor or electric field sensor) or a spatial varying signal such as in a scanning system. One particular type of radiation-receiving receiver for use in the invention is a receiver capable of receiving electromagnetic waves.

When ultrasonic energy is used, transducer 345 can be used as a transmitter and transducers 344,346 as receivers. Naturally, other combinations can be used such as where all transducers are transceivers (transmitters and receivers). For example, transducer 345 can be constructed to transmit ultrasonic energy toward the front passenger seat, which is modified, in this case by the occupying item of the passenger sent, i.e., the rear-facing child seat 342, and the modified waves are received by the transducers 344 and 346, for example. A more common arrangement is where transducers 344, 345 and 346 are all transceivers. Modification of the ultrasonic energy may constitute reflection of the ultrasonic energy as the ultrasonic energy is reflected back by the occupying item of the seat. The waves received by transducers 344 and 346 vary with time depending on the shape of the object occupying the passenger seat, in this case, the rear-facing child seat 342. Each object will reflect back waves having a different pattern. Also, the pattern of waves received by transducer 344 will differ from the pattern received by transducer 346 in view of its different mounting location. This difference generally permits the determination of the location of the reflecting surface (i.e., the rear-facing child seat 342) through triangulation. Through the use of two transducers 344,346, a sort of stereographic image is received by the two transducers and recorded for analysis by processor 340, which is coupled to the transducers 344,345,346. This image will differ for each object that is placed on the vehicle seat and it will also change for each position of a particular object and for each position of the vehicle seat. Elements 344,345,346, although described as transducers, are representative of any type of component used in a wave-based analysis technique.

For ultrasonic systems, the “image” recorded from each ultrasonic transducer/receiver, is actually a time series of digitized data of the amplitude of the received signal versus time. Since there are two receivers, two time series are obtained which are processed by the processor 340. The processor 340 may include electronic circuitry and associated, embedded software. Processor 340 constitutes one form of a generating system in accordance with the invention which generates information about the occupancy of the passenger compartment based on the waves received by the transducers 344,345,346.

When different objects are placed on the front passenger seat, the two images from transducers 344,346, for example, are different but there are also similarities between all images of rear-facing child seats, for example, regardless of where on the vehicle seat they are placed and regardless of what company manufactured the child seat. Alternately, there will be similarities between all images of people sitting on the seat regardless of what they are wearing, their age or size. The problem is to find the “rules” which differentiate the images of one type of object from the images of other types of objects, e.g., which differentiate the occupant images from the rear-facing child seat images. The similarities of these images for various child seats are frequently not obvious to a person looking at plots of the time series and thus computer algorithms are developed to sort out the various patterns. For a more detailed discussion of pattern recognition, see U.S. Pat. No. 5,943,295.

The determination of these rules is important to the pattern recognition techniques used in this invention. In general, three approaches have been useful, artificial intelligence, fuzzy logic and artificial neural networks (including cellular and modular or combination neural networks and support vector machines) (although additional types of pattern recognition techniques may also be used, such as sensor fusion). In some embodiments of this invention, such as the determination that there is an object in the path of a closing window as described below, the rules are sufficiently obvious that a trained researcher can sometimes look at the returned signals and devise an algorithm to make the required determinations. In others, such as the determination of the presence of a rear-facing child seat or of an occupant, artificial neural networks are used to determine the rules. One such set of neural network software for determining the pattern recognition rules is available from the International Scientific Research, Inc. of Panama City, Panama and Kyiv, Ukraine.

The system used in one preferred implementation of inventions herein for the determination of the presence of a rear-facing child seat, of an occupant or of an empty seat is the artificial neural network. In this case, the network operates on the two returned signals as sensed by transducers 344 and 346, for example. Through a training session, the system is taught to differentiate between the three cases. This is done by conducting a large number of experiments where all possible child seats are placed in all possible orientations on the front passenger seat. Similarly, a sufficiently large number of experiments are run with human occupants and with boxes, bags of groceries and other objects (both inanimate and animate). Sometimes, as many as 1,000,000 such experiments are run before the neural network is sufficiently trained so that it can differentiate among the three cases and output the correct decision with a very high probability. Of course, it must be realized that a neural network can also be trained to differentiate among additional cases, e.g., a forward-facing child seat.

Once the network is determined, it is possible to examine the result using tools supplied International Scientific Research, for example, to determine the rules that were finally arrived at by the trial and error techniques. In that case, the rules can then be programmed into a microprocessor resulting in a fuzzy logic or other rule-based system. Alternately, a neural computer, or cellular neural network, can be used to implement the net directly. In either case, the implementation can be carried out by those skilled in the art of pattern recognition. If a microprocessor is used, a memory device is also required to store the data from the analog-to-digital converters that digitize the data from the receiving transducers. On the other hand, if a neural network computer is used, the analog signal can be fed directly from the transducers to the neural network input nodes and an intermediate memory is not required. Memory of some type is needed to store the computer programs in the case of the microprocessor system and if the neural computer is used for more than one task, a memory is needed to store the network specific values associated with each task.

Electromagnetic energy-based occupant sensors exist that use various portions of the electromagnetic spectrum. A system based on the ultraviolet, visible or infrared portions of the spectrum generally operate with a transmitter and a receiver of reflected radiation. The receiver may be a camera, focal plane array, or a photo detector such as a pin or avalanche diode as described in detail in above-referenced patents and patent applications. At other frequencies, the absorption of the electromagnetic energy is primarily and at still other frequencies, the capacitance or electric field influencing effects are used. Generally, the human body will reflect, scatter, absorb or transmit electromagnetic energy in various degrees depending on the frequency of the electromagnetic waves. All such occupant sensors are included herein.

In the embodiment wherein electromagnetic energy is used, it is to be appreciated that any portion of the electromagnetic signals that impinges upon, surrounds or involves a body portion of the occupant is at least partially absorbed by the body portion. Sometimes, this is due to the fact that the human body is composed primarily of water, and that electromagnetic energy of certain frequencies is readily absorbed by water. The amount of electromagnetic signal absorption is related to the frequency of the signal, and size or bulk of the body portion that the signal impinges upon. For example, a torso of a human body tends to absorb a greater percentage of electromagnetic energy than a hand of a human body.

Thus, when electromagnetic waves or energy signals are transmitted by a transmitter, the returning waves received by a receiver provide an indication of the absorption of the electromagnetic energy. That is, absorption of electromagnetic energy will vary depending on the presence or absence of a human occupant, the occupant's size, bulk, surface reflectivity, etc. depending on the frequency, so that different signals will be received relating to the degree or extent of absorption by the occupying item on the seat. The receiver will produce a signal representative of the returned waves or energy signals which will thus constitute an absorption signal as it corresponds to the absorption of electromagnetic energy by the occupying item in the seat.

One or more of the transducers 344,345,346 can also be image-receiving devices, such as cameras, which take images of the interior of the passenger compartment. These images can be transmitted to a remote facility to monitor the passenger compartment or can be stored in a memory device for use in the event of an accident, i.e., to determine the status of the occupants of the vehicle prior to the accident. In this manner, it can be ascertained whether the driver was falling asleep, talking on the phone, etc.

To aid in the detection of the presence of child seats as well as their orientation, a device 341 can be placed on the child seat in some convenient location where its presence can be sensed by a vehicle-mounted sensor that can be in the seat, dashboard, headliner or any other convenient location depending on the system design. The device 341 can be a reflector, resonator, RFID tag, SAW device, or any other tag or similar device that permits easy detection of its presence and perhaps its location or proximity. Such a device can also be placed on any other component in the vehicle to indicate the presence, location or identity of the component. For example, a vehicle may have a changeable component where the properties of that component are used by another system within the vehicle and thus the identification of the particular object is needed so that the proper properties are used by the other system. An occupant monitoring system (e.g. ultrasonic, optical, electric field, etc.) may perform differently depending on whether the seat is made from cloth or leather or a weight sensor may depend on the properties of a particular seat to provide the proper occupant weight. Thus, incorporation of an RFID, SAW, barcode or other tag or mark on any object that can be interrogated by an interrogator is contemplated herein.

A memory device for storing the images of the passenger compartment, and also for receiving and storing any of the other information, parameters and variables relating to the vehicle or occupancy of the vehicle, may be in the form a standardized “black box” (instead of or in addition to a memory part in a processor 340). The IEEE Standards Association is currently beginning to develop an international standard for motor vehicle event data recorders. The information stored in the black box and/or memory unit in the processor 340, can include the images of, or other information related to, the interior of the passenger compartment as well as the number of occupants and the health state of the occupants. The black box would preferably be tamper-proof and crash-proof and enable retrieval of the information after a crash. The use of wave-type sensors as the transducers 344,345,346 as well as electric field sensors is discussed above. Electric field sensors and wave sensors are essentially the same from the point of view of sensing the presence of an occupant in a vehicle. In both cases, a time-varying electric field is disturbed or modified by the presence of the occupant. At high frequencies in the visual, infrared and high frequency radio wave region, the sensor is based on its capability to sense change of wave characteristics of the electromagnetic field, such as amplitude, phase or frequency. As the frequency drops, other characteristics of the field are measured. At still lower frequencies, the occupant's dielectric properties modify parameters of the reactive electric field in the occupied space between/near the plates of a capacitor. In this latter case, the sensor senses the change in charge distribution on the capacitor plates by measuring, for example, the current wave magnitude or phase in the electric circuit that drives the capacitor. These measured parameters are directly connected with parameters of the displacement current in the occupied space. In all cases, the presence of the occupant reflects, absorbs or modifies the waves or variations in the electric field in the space occupied by the occupant. Thus, for the purposes of this invention, capacitance, electric field or electromagnetic wave sensors are equivalent and although they are all technically “field” sensors they can be considered as “wave” sensors herein. What follows is a discussion comparing the similarities and differences between two types of field or wave sensors, electromagnetic wave sensors and capacitive sensors as exemplified by Kithil in U.S. Pat. No. 5,602,734 (see also U.S. Ser. No. 06/275,146, U.S. Ser. No. 06/014,602, U.S. Ser. No. 05/844,486, U.S. Ser. No. 05/802,479, U.S. Ser. No. 05/691,693 and U.S. Ser. No. 05/366,241).

An electromagnetic field disturbed or emitted by a passenger in the case of an electromagnetic wave sensor, for example, and the electric field sensor of Kithil, for example, are in many ways similar and equivalent for the purposes of this invention. The electromagnetic wave sensor is an actual electromagnetic wave sensor by definition because it senses parameters of a wave, which is a coupled pair of continuously changing electric and magnetic fields. The electric field here is not a static, potential one. It is essentially a dynamic, rotational electric field coupled with a changing magnetic one, that is, an electromagnetic wave. It cannot be produced by a steady distribution of electric charges. It is initially produced by moving electric charges in a transmitter, even if this transmitter is a passenger body for the case of a passive infrared sensor.

In the Kithil sensor, a static electric field is declared as an initial material agent coupling a passenger and a sensor (see Column 5, lines 5-7): “The proximity sensor 12 each function by creating an electrostatic field between oscillator input loop 54 and detector output loop 56, which is affected by presence of a person near by, as a result of capacitive coupling, . . . ”. It is a potential, non-rotational electric field. It is not necessarily coupled with any magnetic field. It is the electric field of a capacitor. It can be produced with a steady distribution of electric charges. Thus, it is not an electromagnetic wave by definition but if the sensor is driven by a varying current, then it produces a quasistatic electric field in the space between/near the plates of the capacitor.

Kithil declares that his capacitance sensor uses a static electric field. Thus, from the consideration above, one can conclude that Kithil's sensor cannot be treated as a wave sensor because there are no actual electromagnetic waves but only a static electric field of the capacitor in the sensor system. However, this is not believed to be the case. The Kithil system could not operate with a true static electric field because a steady system does not carry any information. Therefore, Kithil is forced to use an oscillator, causing an alternate current in the capacitor and a reactive quasi-static electric field in the space between the capacitor plates, and a detector to reveal an informative change of the sensor capacitance caused by the presence of an occupant (see FIG. 7 and its description in the '734 patent). In this case, the system becomes a “wave sensor” in the sense that it starts generating actual time-varying electric field that certainly originates electromagnetic waves according to the definition above. That is, Kithil's sensor can be treated as a wave sensor regardless of the shape of the electric field that it creates a beam or a spread shape.

As follows from the Kithil patent, the capacitor sensor is likely a parametric system where the capacitance of the sensor is controlled by the influence of the passenger body. This influence is transferred by means of the near electromagnetic field (i.e., the wave-like process) coupling the capacitor electrodes and the body. It is important to note that the same influence takes place with a real static electric field also, that is in absence of any wave phenomenon. This would be a situation if there were no oscillator in Kithil's system. However, such a system is not workable and thus Kithil reverts to a dynamic system using time-varying electric fields.

Thus, although Kithil declares the coupling is due to a static electric field, such a situation is not realized in his system because an alternating electromagnetic field (“quasi-wave”) exists in the system due to the oscillator. Thus, the sensor is actually a wave sensor, that is, it is sensitive to a change of a wave field in the vehicle compartment. This change is measured by measuring the change of its capacitance. The capacitance of the sensor system is determined by the configuration of its electrodes, one of which is a human body, that is, the passenger inside of and the part which controls the electrode configuration and hence a sensor parameter, the capacitance.

The physics definition of “wave” from Webster's Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary is: “11. Physics. A progressive disturbance propagated from point to point in a medium or space without progress or advance of the points themselves, . . . ”. In a capacitor, the time that it takes for the disturbance (a change in voltage) to propagate through space, the dielectric and to the opposite plate is generally small and neglected but it is not zero. As the frequency driving the capacitor increases and the distance separating the plates increases, this transmission time as a percentage of the period of oscillation can become significant. Nevertheless, an observer between the plates will see the rise and fall of the electric field much like a person standing in the water of an ocean in the presence of water waves. The presence of a dielectric body between the plates causes the waves to get bigger as more electrons flow to and from the plates of the capacitor. Thus, an occupant affects the magnitude of these waves which is sensed by the capacitor circuit. The electromagnetic field is a material agent that carries information about a passenger's position in both Kithil's and a beam-type electromagnetic wave sensor.

Considering now a general occupant sensor and its connection to the rest of the system, an alternate method as taught herein is to use an interrogator to send a signal to the headliner-mounted ultrasonic sensor, for example, causing that sensor to transmit and receive ultrasonic waves. The sensor in this case could perform mathematical operations on the received waves and create a vector of data containing perhaps twenty to forty values and transmit that vector wirelessly to the interrogator. By means of this system, the ultrasonic sensor need only be connected to the vehicle power system and the information can be transferred to and from the sensor wirelessly (either by electromagnetic or ultrasonic waves or equivalent). Such a system significantly reduces the wiring complexity especially when there may be multiple such sensors distributed in the passenger compartment. Then, only a power wire needs to be attached to the sensor and there does not need to be any direct connection between the sensor and the control module. The same philosophy applies to radar-based sensors, electromagnetic sensors of all kinds including cameras, capacitive or other electromagnetic field change sensitive sensors etc. In some cases, the sensor itself can operate on power supplied by the interrogator through radio frequency transmission. In this case, even the connection to the power line can be omitted. This principle can be extended to the large number of sensors and actuators that are currently in the vehicle where the only wires that are needed are those to supply power to the sensors and actuators and the information is supplied wirelessly.

Such wireless powerless sensors can also be used, for example, as close proximity sensors based on measurement of thermal radiation from an occupant. Such sensors can be mounted on any of the surfaces in the passenger compartment, including the seats, which are likely to receive such radiation.

A significant number of people are suffocated each year in automobiles due to excessive heat, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, or other dangerous fumes. The SAW sensor technology is particularly applicable to solving these kinds of problems. The temperature measurement capabilities of SAW transducers have been discussed above. If the surface of a SAW device is covered with a material which captures carbon dioxide, for example, such that the mass, elastic constants or other property of surface coating changes, the characteristics of the surface acoustic waves can be modified as described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,637,987 and elsewhere based on the carbon dioxide content of the air. Once again, an interrogator can sense the condition of these chemical-sensing sensors without the need to supply power. The interrogator can therefore communicate with the sensors wirelessly. If power is supplied then this communication can be through the wires. If a concentration of carbon monoxide is sensed, for example, an alarm can be sounded, the windows opened, and/or the engine extinguished. Similarly, if the temperature within the passenger compartment exceeds a certain level, the windows can be automatically opened a little to permit an exchange of air reducing the inside temperature and thereby perhaps saving the life of an infant or pet left in the vehicle unattended.

In a similar manner, the coating of the surface wave device can contain a chemical which is responsive to the presence of alcohol. In this case, the vehicle can be prevented from operating when the concentration of alcohol vapors in the vehicle exceeds some predetermined limit. Such a device can advantageously be mounted in the headliner above the driver's seat.

Each year, a number of children and animals are killed when they are locked into a vehicle trunk. Since children and animals emit significant amounts of carbon dioxide, a carbon dioxide sensor connected to the vehicle system wirelessly and powerlessly provides an economic way of detecting the presence of a life form in the trunk. If a life form is detected, then a control system can release a trunk lock thereby opening the trunk. Alarms can also be sounded or activated when a life form is detected in the trunk. An infrared or other sensor can perform a similar function.

Weight sensors for use in occupant sensing are disclosed in the '061 application, the occupant sensing section, with reference to FIGS. 69 and 73-74E therein.

Occupant weight sensors can give erroneous results if the seatbelt is pulled tight pushing the occupant into the seat. This is particularly a problem when the seatbelt is not attached to the seat. For such cases, it has been proposed to measure the tension in various parts of the seatbelt. Conventional technology requires that such devices be hard-wired into the vehicle complicating the wire harness.

Other components of the vehicle can also be wirelessly coupled to the processor or central control module for the purposes of data transmission and/or power transmission. A discussion of some components follows.

Seat Systems

In more enhanced applications, it is envisioned that components of the seat will be integrated into the power transmission and communication system. In many luxury cars, the seat subsystem is becoming very complicated. Seat manufacturers state that almost all warranty repairs are associated with the wiring and connectors associated with the seat. The reliability of seat systems can therefore be substantially improved and the incidence of failures or warranty repairs drastically reduced if the wires and connectors can be eliminated from the seat subsystem.

Today, there are switches located on the seat or at other locations in the vehicle for controlling the forward and backward motions, up and down motions, and rotation of the seat and seat back. These switches are connected to the appropriate motors by wires. Additionally, many seats now contain an airbag that must communicate with a sensor located, for example, in the vehicle, B-pillar, sill or door. Many occupant presence sensors and weight sensing systems are also appearing on vehicle seats. Finally, some seats contain heaters and cooling elements, vibrators, and other comfort and convenience devices that require wires and switches.

As an example, let us now look at weight sensing. Under the teachings of an invention disclosed herein, silicon strain gage weight sensors can be placed on the bolts that secure each seat to the slide mechanism as shown in FIG. 73 of the '061 application. These strain gage subsystems can contain sufficient electronics and inductive pickup coils so as to receive their operational energy from a pair of wires appropriately placed beneath the seats. The seat weight measurements can then be superimposed on the power frequency or transmitted wirelessly using RP or other convenient wireless technology. Other weight sensing technologies such as bladders and pressure sensors or two-dimensional resistive deflection sensing mars can also be handled in a similar manner.

Other methods of seat weight sensing include measuring the deflection of a part of the seat or the deflection of the bolts that connect the seat to the seat slide. For example, the strain in a bolt can be readily determined using, for example, SAW, wire or silicon strain gages, optical fiber strain gages, time of flight or phase of ultrasonic waves traveling through the strained bolt, or the capacitive change of two appropriately position capacitor plates.

Using the loosely coupled inductive system described above, power in excess of a kilowatt can be readily transferred to operate seat position motors without the use of directly connected wires. The switches can also be coupled into the inductive system without any direct wire connections and the switches, which now can be placed on the door armrest or on the seat as desired, can provide the information to control the seat motors. Additionally, since microprocessors will now be present on every motor and switch, the classical problem of the four-way seat system to control three degrees of freedom can be easily solved.

In current four-way seat systems, when an attempt is made to vertically raise the seat, the seat also rotates. Similarly, when an attempt is made to rotate the seat, it also invariably moves either up or down. This is because there are four switches to control three degrees of freedom and thus there is an infinite combination of switch settings for each seat position setting. This problem can be easily solved with an algorithm that translates the switch settings to the proper motor positions. Thus only three switches are needed.

The positions of the seat, seatback and headrest, can also be readily monitored without having direct wire connections to the vehicle. This can be done in numerous ways beginning with the encoder system that is currently in use and ending with simple RFID radar reflective tags that can be interrogated by a remote RFID tag reader. Based on the time of flight of RF waves, the positions of all of the desired surfaces of the seat can be instantly determined wirelessly.

1.6 Vehicle or Component Control

At least one invention herein is also particularly useful in light of the foreseeable implementation of smart highways. Smart highways will result in vehicles traveling down highways under partial or complete control of an automatic system, i.e., not being controlled by the driver. The on-board diagnostic system will thus be able to determine failure of a component prior to or upon failure thereof and inform the vehicle's guidance system to cause the vehicle to move out of the stream of traffic, i.e., onto a shoulder of the highway, in a safe and orderly manner. Moreover, the diagnostic system may be controlled or programmed to prevent the movement of the disabled vehicle back into the stream of traffic until the repair of the component is satisfactorily completed.

In a method in accordance with this embodiment, the operation of the component would be monitored and if abnormal operation of the component is detected, e.g., by any of the methods and apparatus disclosed herein (although other component failure systems may of course be used in this implementation), the guidance system of the vehicle which controls the movement of the vehicle would be notified, e.g., via a signal from the diagnostic module to the guidance system, and the guidance system would be programmed to move the vehicle out of the stream of traffic, or off of the restricted roadway, possibly to a service station or dealer, upon reception of the particular signal from the diagnostic module.

The automatic guidance systems for vehicles traveling on highways may be any existing system or system being developed, such as one based on satellite positioning techniques or ground-based positioning techniques. It can also be based on vision systems such as those used to provide lane departure warning. Since the guidance system may be programmed to ascertain the vehicle's position on the highway, it can determine the vehicle's current position, the nearest location out of the stream of traffic, or off of the restricted roadway, such as an appropriate shoulder or exit to which the vehicle may be moved, and the path of movement of the vehicle from the current position to the location out of the stream of traffic, or off of the restricted roadway. The vehicle may thus be moved along this path under die control of the automatic guidance system. In the alternative, the path may be displayed to a driver (on a heads-up or other display for example) and the driver can follow the path, i.e., manually control the vehicle. The diagnostic module and/or guidance system may be designed to prevent re-entry of the vehicle into the stream of traffic, or off of the restricted roadway, until the abnormal operation of the component is satisfactorily addressed.

FIG. 29 is a flow chart of some of the methods for directing a vehicle off of a roadway if a component is operating abnormally. The component's operation is monitored at step 380 and a determination is made at step 381 whether its operation is abnormal. If not, the operation of the component is monitored further. If the operation of the component is abnormal, the vehicle can be directed off the roadway at step 382. More particularly, this can be accomplished by generating a signal indicating the abnormal operation of the component at step 383, directing this signal to a guidance system in the vehicle at step 384 that guides movement of the vehicle off of the roadway at step 385. Also, if the component is operating abnormally, the current position of the vehicle and the location of a site off of the roadway can be determined at step 386, e.g., using satellite-based or ground-based location determining techniques, a path from the current location to the off-roadway location determined at step 387 and then the vehicle directed along this path at step 388. Periodically, a determination is made at step 389 whether the component's abnormality has been satisfactorily addressed and/or corrected and if so, the vehicle can re-enter the roadway and operation of the component begins again. If not, the re-entry of the vehicle onto the roadway is prevented at step 390.

FIG. 30 schematically shows the basic components for performing this method, i.e., a component operation monitoring system 391 (such as described above), an optional satellite-based or ground-based positioning system 392 and a vehicle guidance system 393.

2.0 Telematics 2.1 Transmission of Vehicle and Occupant Information

Described herein is a system for determining the status of occupants in a vehicle, and/or of the vehicle, and in the event of an accident or at any other appropriate time, transmitting the status of the occupants and/or the vehicle, and optionally additional information, via a communications channel or link to a remote monitoring facility. In addition to the status of the occupant, it is also important to be able to analyze the operating conditions of the vehicle and detect when a component of the vehicle is about to fail. By notifying the driver, a dealer or other repair facility and/or the vehicle manufacturer of the impending failure of the component, appropriate corrective action can be taken to avoid such failure.

As noted above, at least one invention herein relates generally to telematics and the transmission of information from a vehicle to one or more remote sites which can react to the position or status of the vehicle or occupant(s) therein.

Initially, sensing of the occupancy of the vehicle and the optional transmission of this information, which may include images, to remote locations will be discussed. This entails obtaining information from various sensors about the occupant(s) in the passenger compartment of the vehicle, e.g., the number of occupants, their type and their motion, if any. Thereafter, general vehicle diagnostic methods will be discussed with the diagnosis being transmittable via a communications device to the remote locations. Finally, a discussion of various sensors for use on the vehicle to sense different operating parameters and conditions of the vehicle is provided. All of the sensors discussed herein can be coupled to a communications device enabling transmission of data, signals and/or images to the remote locations, and reception of the same from the remote locations.

FIG. 31 shows schematically the interface between a vehicle interior monitoring system in accordance with the invention and the vehicle's cellular or other telematics communication system. An adult occupant 395 is shown sitting on the front passenger seat 343 and four transducers 344, 345, 347 and 348 are used to determine the presence (or absence) of the occupant on that seat 343. One of the transducers 345 in this case acts as both a transmitter and receiver while transducer 344 can act only as a receiver or as both a transmitter and receiver. Alternately, transducer 344 could serve as both a transmitter and receiver or the transmitting function could be alternated between the two transducers 344, 345. Also, in many cases more than two transmitters and receivers are used and in still other cases, other types of sensors, such as electric field, capacitance, self-tuning antennas (collectively represented by 347 and 348), weight, seatbelt, heartbeat, motion and seat position sensors, are also used in combination with the radiation sensors.

For a general object, transducers 344, 345, 347, 348 can also be used to determine the type of object, determine the location of the object and/or determine another property or characteristic of the object. A property of the object could be the presence and/or orientation of a child seat, the velocity of an adult and the like. For example, the transducers 344, 345, 347, 348 can be designed to enable a determination that an object is present on the seat, that the object is a child seat and that the child seat is rear-facing.

The transducers 344 and 345 are attached to the vehicle, for example, buried in the A-pillar trim, where their presence can be disguised, and are connected to processor 340 that may also be hidden in the trim as shown (this being a non-limiting position for the processor 340). Other mounting locations can also be used. For example, transducers 344, 345 can be mounted inside the seat (along with or in place of transducers 347 and 348), in the ceiling of the vehicle, in the B-pillar, in the C-pillar and in the doors. Indeed, the vehicle interior monitoring system in accordance with the invention may comprise a plurality of monitoring units, each arranged to monitor a particular seating location. In this case, for the rear seating locations, transducers might be mounted in the B-pillar or C-pillar or in the rear of the front seat or in the rear side doors. Possible mounting locations for transducers, transmitters, receivers and other occupant sensing devices are disclosed in the above-referenced patents and patent applications and all of these mounting locations are contemplated for use with the transducers described herein.

The cellular phone or other communications system 396 outputs to an antenna 397. The transducers 344, 345, 347 and 348 in conjunction with the pattern recognition hardware and software, which is implemented in processor 340 and is packaged on a printed circuit board or flex circuit along with the transducers 344 and 345, determine the presence of an occupant within a few seconds after the vehicle is started, or within a few seconds after the door is closed. Similar systems located to monitor the remaining seats in the vehicle also determine the presence of occupants at the other seating locations and this result is stored in the computer memory which is part of each monitoring system processor 340.

Periodically and in particular in the event of or in anticipation of an accident, the electronic system associated with the cellular phone or other telematics system 396 interrogates the various interior monitoring system memories and arrives at a count of the number of occupants in the vehicle, and optionally, even makes a determination as to whether each occupant was wearing a seatbelt and if he or she is moving after the accident. The phone or other communications system then automatically dials or otherwise contacts the EMS operator (such as 911 or through a teletnatics service such as OnStar®) and the information obtained from the interior monitoring systems is forwarded so that a determination can be made as to the number of ambulances and other equipment to send to the accident site, for example. Such vehicles will also have a system, such as the global positioning system, which permits the vehicle to determine its exact location and to forward this information to the EMS operator, for example.

An alternate preferred communications system is the use of satellite internet or Wi-Fi internet such is expected to be operational on vehicles in a few years. In this manner, the vehicle will always have communications access regardless of its location on the earth. This is based on the premise that Wi-Fi or equivalent will be in place for all those locations where satellite communication is not available such as in tunnels, urban canyons and the like.

Thus, in basic embodiments of the invention, wave or other energy-receiving transducers are arranged in the vehicle at appropriate locations, trained if necessary depending on the particular embodiment, and function to determine whether a life form is present in the vehicle and if so, how many life forms are present and where they are located etc. To this end, transducers can be arranged to be operative at only a single seating locations or at multiple seating locations with a provision being made to eliminate repetitive count of occupants. A determination can also be made using the transducers as to whether the life forms are humans, or more specifically, adults, children in child seats, etc. As noted above, this is possible using pattern recognition techniques. Moreover, the processor or processors associated with the transducers can be trained to determine the location of the life forms, either periodically or continuously or possibly only immediately before, during and/or after a crash. The location of the life forms can be as general or as specific as necessary depending on the system requirements, i.e., that a human is situated on the driver's seat in a normal position (general) or a determination can be made that a human is situated on the driver's seat and is leaning forward and/or to the side at a specific angle as well as the position of his or her extremities and head and chest (specifically). The degree of detail is limited by several factors, including, for example, the number, type and position of transducers and training of the pattern recognition algorithm.

In addition to the use of transducers to determine the presence and location of occupants in a vehicle, other sensors could also be used. For example, a heartbeat sensor which determines the number and presence of heartbeats can also be arranged in the vehicle, which would thus also determine the number of occupants as the number of occupants would be equal to the number of heartbeats. Conventional heartbeat sensors can be adapted to differentiate between a heartbeat of an adult, a heartbeat of a child and a heartbeat of an animal. As its name implies, a heartbeat sensor detects a heartbeat, and the magnitude thereof, of a human occupant of the seat, if such a human occupant is present. The output of the heartbeat sensor is input to the processor of the interior monitoring system. One heartbeat sensor for use in the invention may be of the types as disclosed in McEwan (U.S. Pat. No. 5,573,012 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,766,208). The heartbeat sensor can be positioned at any convenient position relative to the seats where occupancy is being monitored. A preferred location is within the vehicle seat back.

An alternative way to determine the number of occupants is to monitor the weight being applied to the seats, i.e., each seating location, by arranging weight sensors at each seating location which might also be able to provide a weight distribution of an object on the seat. Analysis of the weight and/or weight distribution by a predetermined method can provide an indication of occupancy by a human, an adult or child, or an inanimate object.

Another type of sensor which is not believed to have been used in an interior monitoring system heretofore is a micropower impulse radar (MIR) sensor which determines motion of an occupant and thus can determine his or her heartbeat (as evidenced by motion of the chest). Such an MIR sensor can be arranged to detect motion in a particular area in which the occupant's chest would most likely be situated or could be coupled to an arrangement which determines the location of the occupant's chest and then adjusts the operational field of the MIR sensor based on the determined location of the occupant's chest. A motion sensor utilizing a micropower impulse radar (MIR) system is disclosed, for example, in McEwan (U.S. Pat. No. 5,361,070), as well as many other patents by the same inventor. Motion sensing is accomplished by monitoring a particular range from the sensor, as disclosed in that patent. MIR is one form of radar which has applicability to occupant sensing and can be mounted at various locations in the vehicle. It has an advantage over ultrasonic sensors in that data can be acquired at a higher speed and thus the motion of an occupant can be more easily tracked. The ability to obtain returns over the entire occupancy range is somewhat more difficult than with ultrasound resulting in a more expensive system overall. MIR has additional advantages in lack of sensitivity to temperature variation and has a comparable resolution to about 40 kHz ultrasound. Resolution comparable to higher frequency is also possible. Additionally, multiple MIR sensors can be used when high speed tracking of the motion of an occupant during a crash is required since they can be individually pulsed without interfering with each through time division multiplexing.

An alternative way to determine motion of the occupant(s) is to monitor the weight distribution of the occupant whereby changes in weight distribution after an accident would be highly suggestive of movement of the occupant. A system for determining the weight distribution of the occupants could be integrated or otherwise arranged in the right center and left, front and back vehicle seats such as 343 and several patents and publications describe such systems.

More generally, any sensor which determines the presence and health state of an occupant can also be integrated into the vehicle interior monitoring system in accordance with the invention. For example, a sensitive motion sensor can determine whether an occupant is breathing and a chemical sensor can determine the amount of carbon dioxide, or the concentration of carbon dioxide, in the air in the vehicle which can be correlated to the health state of the occupant(s). The motion sensor and chemical sensor can be designed to have a fixed operational field situated where the occupant's mouth is most likely to be located. In this manner, detection of carbon dioxide in the fixed operational field could be used as an indication of the presence of a human occupant in order to enable the determination of the number of occupants in the vehicle. In the alternative, the motion sensor and chemical sensor can be adjustable and adapted to adjust their operational field in conjunction with a determination by an occupant position and location sensor which would determine the location of specific parts of the occupant's body, e.g., his or her chest or mouth. Furthermore, an occupant position and location sensor can be used to determine the location of the occupant's eyes and determine whether the occupant is conscious, i.e., whether his or her eyes are open or closed or moving.

The use of chemical sensors can also be used to detect whether there is blood present in the vehicle, for example, after an accident. Additionally, microphones can detect whether there is noise in the vehicle caused by groaning, yelling, etc., and transmit any such noise through the cellular or other communication connection to a remote listening facility (such as operated by OnStar®).

FIG. 32 shows a schematic diagram of an embodiment of the invention including a system for determining the presence and health state of any occupants of the vehicle and a telecommunications link. This embodiment includes a system for determining the presence of any occupants 400 which may take the form of a heartbeat sensor or motion sensor as described above and a system for determining the health state of any occupants 401. The health state determining system may be integrated into the system for determining the presence of any occupants, i.e., one and the same component, or separate therefrom. Further, a system for determining the location, and optionally velocity, of the occupants or one or more parts thereof 402 are provided and may be any conventional occupant position sensor or preferably, one of the occupant position sensors as described herein (e.g., those utilizing waves, electromagnetic radiation or electric fields) or as described in the current assignee's patents and patent applications referenced above.

A processor 403 is coupled to the presence determining system 400, the health state determining system 401 and the location determining system 402. A communications system and/or unit 404 is coupled to the processor 403. The processor 403 and/or communications unit 404 can also be coupled to microphones 405 that can be distributed throughout the vehicle and include voice-processing circuitry to enable the occupant(s) to effect vocal control of the processor 403, communications unit 404 or any coupled component or oral communications via the communications unit 404. The processor 403 is also coupled to another vehicular system, component or subsystem 406 and can issue control commands to effect adjustment of the operating conditions of the system, component or subsystem. Such a system, component or subsystem can be the heating or air-conditioning system, the entertainment system, an occupant restraint device such as an airbag, a glare prevention system, etc. Also, a positioning system 407 could be coupled to the processor 403 and provides an indication of the absolute position of the vehicle, preferably using satellite-based positioning technology (e.g., a GPS receiver).

In normal use (other than after a crash), the presence determining system 400 determines whether any human occupants are present, i.e., adults or children, and the location determining system 402 determines the occupant's location. The processor 403 receives signals representative of the presence of occupants and their location and determines whether the vehicular system, component or subsystem 406 can be modified to optimize its operation for the specific arrangement of occupants. For example, if the processor 403 determines that only the front seats in the vehicle are occupied, it could control the heating system to provide heat only through vents situated to provide heat for the front-seated occupants.

Another possible vehicular system, component or subsystem is a navigational aid, i.e., a route display or map. In this case, the position of the vehicle as determined by the positioning system 407 is conveyed through processor 403 to the communications unit 404 to a remote facility and a map is transmitted from this facility to the vehicle to be displayed on the route display. If directions are needed, a request for the same could be entered into an input unit 408 associated with the processor 403 and transmitted to the facility. Data for the display map and/or vocal instructions could be transmitted from this facility to the vehicle.

Moreover, using this embodiment, it is possible to remotely monitor the health state of the occupants in the vehicle and most importantly, the driver. The health state determining system 401 may be used to detect whether the driver's breathing is erratic or indicative of a state in which the driver is dozing off. The health state determining system 401 could also include a breath-analyzer to determine whether the driver's breath contains alcohol. In this case, the health state of the driver is relayed through the processor 403 and the communications unit 404 to the remote facility and appropriate action can be taken. For example, it would be possible to transmit a command (from the remote facility) to the vehicle to activate an alarm or illuminate a warning light or if the vehicle is equipped with an automatic guidance system and ignition shut-off, to cause the vehicle to come to a stop on the shoulder of the roadway or elsewhere out of the traffic stream. The alarm, warning light, automatic guidance system and ignition shut-off are thus particular vehicular components or subsystems represented by 406.

In use after a crash, the presence determining system 400, health state determining system 401 and location determining system 402 can obtain readings from the passenger compartment and direct such readings to the processor 403. The processor 403 analyzes the information and directs or controls the transmission of the information about the occupant(s) to a remote, manned facility. Such information would include the number and type of occupants, i.e., adults, children, infants, whether any of the occupants have stopped breathing or are breathing erratically, whether the occupants are conscious (as evidenced by, e.g., eye motion), whether blood is present (as detected by a chemical sensor) and whether the occupants are making noise. Moreover, the communications link through the communications unit 404 can be activated immediately after the crash to enable personnel at the remote facility to initiate communications with the vehicle.

An occupant sensing system can also involve sensing for the presence of a living occupant in a trunk of a vehicle or in a closed vehicle, for example, when a child is inadvertently left in the vehicle or enters the trunk and the trunk closes. To this end, a SAW-based chemical sensor 410 is illustrated in FIG. 33A for mounting in a vehicle trunk as illustrated in FIG. 33. The chemical sensor 410 is designed to measure carbon dioxide concentration through the mass loading effects as described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,895,017 with a polymer coating selected that is sensitive to carbon dioxide. The speed of the surface acoustic wave is a function of the carbon dioxide level in the atmosphere. Section 412 of the chemical sensor 410 contains a coating of such a polymer and the acoustic velocity in this section is a measure of the carbon dioxide concentration. Temperature effects are eliminated through a comparison of the sonic velocities in sections 412 and 411 as described above.

Thus, when the trunk lid 409 is closed and a source of carbon dioxide such as a child or animal is trapped within the trunk, the chemical sensor 410 will provide information indicating the presence of the carbon dioxide producing object to the interrogator which can then release a trunk lock permitting the trunk lid 409 to automatically open. In this manner, the problem of children and animals suffocating in closed trunks is eliminated. Alternately, information that a person or animal is trapped in a trunk can be sent by the telematics system to law enforcement authorities or other location or facility remote from the vehicle.

A similar device can be distributed at various locations within the passenger compartment of vehicle along with a combined temperature sensor. If the car has been left with a child or other animal while owner is shopping, for example, and if the temperature rises within the vehicle to an unsafe level or, alternately, if the temperature drops below an unsafe level, then the vehicle can be signaled to take appropriate action which may involve opening the windows or starting the vehicle with either air conditioning or heating as appropriate. Alternately, information that a person or animal is trapped within a vehicle can be sent by the telematics system to law enforcement authorities or other location remote from the vehicle. Thus, through these simple wireless powerless sensors, the problem of suffocation either from lack of oxygen or death from excessive heat or cold can all be solved in a simple, low-cost manner through using an interrogator as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,662,642.

Additionally, a sensitive layer on a SAW can be made to be sensitive to other chemicals such as water vapor for humidity control or alcohol for drunk-driving control. Similarly, the sensitive layer can be designed to be sensitive to carbon monoxide thereby preventing carbon monoxide poisoning. Many other chemicals can be sensed for specific applications such as to check for chemical leaks in commercial vehicles, for example. Whenever such a sensor system determines that a dangerous situation is developing, an alarm can be sounded and/or the situation can be automatically communicated to an off-vehicle location through the internet, telematics, a cell phone such as a 911 call, the Internet or though a subscriber service such as OnStar®.

The operating conditions of the vehicle can also be transmitted along with the status of the occupants to a remote monitoring facility. The operating conditions of the vehicle include whether the motor is running and whether the vehicle is moving. Thus, in a general embodiment in which information on both occupancy of the vehicle and the operating conditions of the vehicle are transmitted, one or more properties or characteristics of occupancy of the vehicle are determined, such constituting information about the occupancy of the vehicle, and one or more states of the vehicle or of a component of the vehicle is determined, such constituting information about the operation of the vehicle. The information about the occupancy of the vehicle and operation of the vehicle are selectively transmitted, possibly the information about occupancy to an emergency response center and the information about the vehicle to a dispatcher, a dealer or repair facility and/or the vehicle manufacturer.

Transmission of the information about the operation of the vehicle, i.e., diagnostic information, may be achieved via a satellite and/or via the Internet. The vehicle would thus include appropriate electronic hardware and/or software to enable the transmission of a signal to a satellite, from where it could be re-transmitted to a remote location (for example via the Internet), and/or to enable the transmission to a web site or host computer. In the latter case, the vehicle could be assigned a domain name or e-mail address for identification or transmission origination purposes.

Use of the Internet for diagnostic information conveying purposes involves programming the communications unit 404 on the vehicle to communicate with a wireless Internet service provider (ISP) 413 (see FIG. 29). The necessary protocols can be provided to the vehicle-resident communications system to enable such communications. Through the wireless ISP, the vehicle-resident communications unit 404 can establish communications with any remote site 427 or other vehicle-resident communications system connected to the Internet. The communications unit 404 can either alternatively communicate with only a wireless ISP or can additionally communicate with a non-ISP remote site via any of the other communications techniques described above, i.e., transmission and reception of waves at a selected frequency.

When capable of using multiple communications techniques, the communications unit 404 can be designed to select which communications technique to use based on various parameters. For example, if the vehicle is a truck trailer or cargo container which is often transported by ship for transoceanic journeys, the communications unit 404 can be programmed to communicate with either an ISP or a pseudo-ISP depending on the travel status. Thus, it would communicate with an ISP when it is on land, e.g., attached to a truck and being driven from one location to another, and with a communications system on the ship when it is seaborne. In the latter case, the communications unit 404 could communicate with a ship-resident pseudo-ISP, possibly even installed solely for the purpose of communicating with cargo containers, which would in turn communicate via satellite with a remote location. Other parameters which may be used to determine which communications technique to be used include: the location of the vehicle, the importance of the data or information obtained by the vehicle-resident sensing system to be transmitted and the urgency with which the data or information obtained by the vehicle-resident sensing system should be transmitted. The determination may be made either by the communications unit 404 or may be made by whatever data gathering system is being used. In the latter case, the importance or urgency of the information is determined by the data gathering system and directed to the communications system with an indication of the manner in which the information should be sent. A priority coding system may be used.

In one embodiment, when capable of using multiple communications techniques, the communications unit 404 can be designed to select which communications technique to use based on the detection of a wireless ISP with which the communications unit 404 can communicate. The communications unit 404 would include or be connected to an ISP detection system. 414 programmed to detect the presence of a useable, secure wireless ISP wherever it is and then use this detected wireless ISP to provide information to a remote site via the Internet. A program to enable a computer device to detect available wireless ISP's is known to those skilled in the art.

The diagnostic discussion above has centered on notifying the vehicle operator of a pending problem with a vehicle component. Today, there is great competition in the automobile marketplace and the manufacturers and dealers who are most responsive to customers are likely to benefit by increased sales both from repeat purchasers and new customers. The diagnostic module disclosed herein benefits the dealer by making him instantly aware, through the cellular telephone system, or other communication link, coupled to the diagnostic module or system in accordance with the invention, when a component is likely to fail. As envisioned when the diagnostic module 33 detects a potential failure it not only notifies the driver through a display 34 (as shown in FIGS. 3 and 4), but also automatically notifies the dealer through a vehicle cellular phone 32 or other telematics communication link such as the internet via satellite or Wi-Fi or equivalent. The dealer can thus contact the vehicle owner and schedule an appointment to undertake the necessary repair at each party's mutual convenience. Contact by the dealer to the vehicle owner can occur as the owner is driving the vehicle, using a communications device. Thus, the dealer can contact the driver and inform him of their mutual knowledge of the problem and discuss scheduling maintenance to attend to the problem. The customer is pleased since a potential vehicle breakdown has been avoided and the dealer is pleased since he is likely to perform the repair work. The vehicle manufacturer also benefits by early and accurate statistics on the failure rate of vehicle components. This early warning system can reduce the cost of a potential recall for components having design defects. It could even have saved lives if such a system had been in place during the Firestone tire failure problem mentioned above. The vehicle manufacturer will thus be guided toward producing higher quality vehicles thus improving his competitiveness. Finally, experience with this system will actually lead to a reduction in the number of sensors on the vehicle since only those sensors that are successful in predicting failures will be necessary.

The ability to initiate communications from a vehicle to a remote entity such as a dealer or manufacturer opens up a wide range of monitoring methods for monitoring operability of vehicles and specifically, the functionality and operability of components of the vehicles to prevent vehicle breakdowns. For example, a method of doing business is readily apparent since the dealer can sell a subscription to a monitoring plan to the vehicle owner which will direct the communications from the vehicle's communication system to the dealer (or an agent of the dealer). The monitoring plan would include monitoring of the vehicle components and directing of communications about the components to a monitoring facility and preferably a plan which responds to the communications. The response could be automated advice on dealing with the problem, personal advice about the problem (whereby the data about the components can be further processed at the remote site to obtain a more thorough evaluation of the problem and a course of action generated based on the evaluation), arranging for roadside assistance and/or arranging for a service appointment with the nearest service center. The latter two functions would be aided by providing a location determining system on the vehicle to determine the vehicle's location and provide the location along with the diagnostic and/or prognostic information to enable roadside assistance or the identification of the nearest service center. The same monitoring plan could also be marketed and sold to dealers and other service facilities to enable them to be listed as possible service centers whenever vehicles have problems in a designated coverage area for each dealer or service facility. The same monitoring plan could also be marketed and sold to vehicle manufacturers who might be interested in providing a service contract for vehicle owners as an inducement to purchase their vehicles.

Another advantage obtained by enabling a vehicle manufacturer to obtain diagnostic and prognostic data about their vehicles is that they can use forecasting techniques to identify problems with particular vehicle models in general or particular vehicles when operating under specific conditions. In this case, a method is contemplated wherein the manufacturer can direct a communication to the processor on identified vehicles (of the same model or type or operating under the same conditions) to initiate an interrogation of the status of these vehicle and notify the vehicle owners if there is a model-based problem. The vehicle-resident processor would be designed to accept a command from the vehicle manufacturer to initiate such an interrogation, which might entail obtaining data from all sensors coupled to the processor or a subset of the sensors. Safeguards could be built into the command to prevent unauthorized users from accessing the vehicle-resident processor. The manufacturer could, depending on the severity of the problem, request that the vehicle owner bring the vehicle for servicing to the nearest service center, which would be determined by receiving location information from the vehicle as obtained by a, e.g., GPS system on the vehicle.

Access to the vehicle's processor by the manufacturer also allows for updating of software on the vehicle. If a problem is identified in specific models, the manufacturer can perform a troubleshooting operation to identify the problem and design a solution. If the solution can be implemented through a software update, then this software update is directed to similar vehicles by the manufacturer. The vehicle owner is not required to bring the vehicle in to a service center to be serviced but rather, a remote servicing of software is provided. Also, if the diagnostic and/or prognostic data is monitored by dealers only, then when one dealer detects a problem, they can notify the manufacturer and other dealers. They can also place a press release about the problem on the Internet and if a list of contact e-mails for vehicle owners is existing, then can direct e-mails about the problem directly to the vehicle owners.

Another use of the invention is to enable the vehicle owner or operator to obtain diagnostic and prognostic data about their vehicle, or cause a diagnostic or prognostic report to be generated and sent to a remote facility, e.g., the dealer or manufacturer.

In sum, the diagnostic and prognostic system is designed to enable one or more selected parties to initiate a request for and receive a report on the diagnostic condition of the vehicle or components thereof, or a report on the predicted failure of one or more components. If the request is made by a party other than the driver, or other than using a device on the vehicle, the request could be made using a telematics system, e.g., a communications unit connected to the diagnostic module.

For most cases, it is sufficient to notify a driver that a component is about to fail through a warning display. In some critical cases, action beyond warning the driver may be required. If, for example, the diagnostic module detected that the alternator was beginning to fail, in addition to warning the driver of this eventuality, the diagnostic system could send a signal to another vehicle system to turn off all non-essential devices which use electricity thereby conserving electrical energy and maximizing the time and distance that the vehicle can travel before exhausting the energy in the battery. Additionally, this system can be coupled to a system such as OnStar® or a vehicle route guidance system, and the driver can be guided to the nearest open repair facility or a facility of his or her choice.

The Internet could be used to transmit information about the operation of the vehicle, including diagnostic information, to any remote site including the dealer and vehicle manufacturer as mentioned above and also any other entity interested in the operation of the vehicle, including for example, an automated highway system, a highway monitoring system, police or any other governmental agency, the vehicle owner if not present in the vehicle, and a vehicle management group.

FIG. 34 shows a schematic of the integration of the occupant sensing with a telematics link and the vehicle diagnosis with a telematics link. As envisioned, the occupant sensing system 415 includes those components which determine the presence, position, health state, and other information relating to the occupants, for example the transducers discussed above with reference to FIG. 28 and weight sensors. Information relating to the occupants includes information as to what the driver is doing, talking on the phone, communicating with OnStar®, the internet or other route guidance, listening to the radio, sleeping, drunk, drugged, having a heart attack, etc. The occupant sensing system may also be any of those systems and apparatus described in any of the current assignee's above-referenced patents and patent applications or any other comparable occupant sensing system which performs any or all of the same functions as they relate to occupant sensing. Examples of sensors which might be installed on a vehicle and constitute the occupant sensing system include heartbeat sensors, motion sensors, weight sensors, ultrasonic sensors, MIR sensors, microphones and optical sensors.

A crash sensor 416 is provided and determines when the vehicle experiences a crash. Crash sensor 416 may be any type of crash sensor.

Vehicle sensors 417 include sensors which detect the operating conditions of the vehicle such as those sensors discussed with reference to FIG. 33 and others above. Also included are tire sensors such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,662,642. Other examples include velocity and acceleration sensors, and angular and angular rate pitch, roll and yaw sensors or an IMU. Of particular importance are sensors that tell what the car is doing: speed, skidding, sliding, location, communicating with other cars or the infrastructure, etc.

Environment sensors 418 include sensors which provide data concerning the operating environment of the vehicle, e.g., the inside and outside temperatures, the time of day, the location of the sun and lights, the locations of other vehicles, rain, snow, sleet, visibility (fog), general road condition information, pot holes, ice, snow cover, road visibility, assessment of traffic, video pictures of an accident either involving the vehicle or another vehicle, etc. Possible sensors include optical sensors which obtain images of the environment surrounding the vehicle, blind spot detectors which provide data on the blind spot of the driver, automatic cruise control sensors that can provide images of vehicles in front of the host vehicle, and various radar and lidar devices which provide the position of other vehicles and objects relative to the subject vehicle.

The occupant sensing system 415, crash sensors 416, vehicle sensors 417, and environment sensors 418 can all be coupled to a communications device 419 which may contain a memory unit and appropriate electrical hardware to communicate with all of the sensors, process data from the sensors, and transmit data from the sensors. The memory unit could be useful to store data from the sensors, updated periodically, so that such information could be transmitted at set time intervals.

The communications device 419 can be designed to transmit information to any number of different types of facilities. For example, the communications device 419 could be designed to transmit information to an emergency response facility 420 in the event of an accident involving the vehicle. The transmission of the information could be triggered by a signal from the crash sensor 416 that the vehicle was experiencing a crash or had experienced a crash. The information transmitted could come from the occupant sensing system 415 so that the emergency response could be tailored to the status of the occupants. For example, if the vehicle was determined to have ten occupants, more ambulances might be sent than if the vehicle contained only a single occupant. Also, if the occupants are determined not be breathing, then a higher priority call with living survivors might receive assistance first. As such, the information from the occupant sensing system 415 could be used to prioritize the duties of the emergency response personnel.

Information from the vehicle sensors 417 and environment sensors 418 could also be transmitted to law enforcement authorities 422 in the event of an accident so that the cause(s) of the accident could be determined. Such information can also include information from the occupant sensing system 415, which might reveal that the driver was talking on the phone, putting on make-up, eating or another distracting activity, information from the vehicle sensors 417 which might reveal a problem with the vehicle, and information from the environment sensors 418 which might reveal the existence of slippery roads, dense fog and the like.

Information from the occupant sensing system 415, vehicle sensors 417 and environment sensors 418 could also be transmitted to the vehicle manufacturer 423 in the event of an accident so that a determination can be made as to whether failure of a component of the vehicle caused or contributed to the cause of the accident. For example, the vehicle sensors might determine that the tire pressure was too low so that advice can be disseminated to avoid maintaining the tire pressure too low in order to avoid an accident. Information from the vehicle sensors 417 relating to component failure could be transmitted to a dealer/repair facility 421 which could schedule maintenance to correct the problem.

The communications device 419 could be designed to transmit particular information to each site, i.e., only information important to be considered by the personnel at that site. For example, the emergency response personnel have no need for the fact that the tire pressure was too low but such information is important to the law enforcement authorities 422 (for the possible purpose of issuing a recall of the tire and/or vehicle) and the vehicle manufacturer 423.

The communication device can be a cellular phone, DSRC, OnStar®, or other subscriber-based telematics system, a peer-to-peer vehicle communication system that eventually communicates to the infrastructure and then, perhaps, to the Internet with e-mail or instant message to the dealer, manufacturer, vehicle owner, law enforcement authorities or others. It can also be a vehicle to LEO or Geostationary satellite system such as SkyBitz which can then forward the information to the appropriate facility either directly or through the Internet or a direct connection to the internet through a satellite or 802.11 Wi-Fi link or equivalent.

The communication may need to be secret so as not to violate the privacy of the occupants and thus encrypted communication may, in many cases, be required. Other innovations described herein include the transmission of any video data from a vehicle to another vehicle or to a facility remote from the vehicle by any means such as a telematics communication system such as DSRC. OnStar®, a cellular phone system, a communication via GEO, geocentric or other satellite system and any communication that communicates the results of a pattern recognition system analysis. Also, any communication from a vehicle can combine sensor information with location information.

When optical sensors are provided as part of the occupant sensing system 415, video conferencing becomes a possibility, whether or not the vehicle experiences a crash. That is, die occupants of the vehicle can engage in a video conference with people at another location 424 via establishment of a communications channel by the communications device 419.

The vehicle diagnostic system described above using a telematics link can transmit information from any type of sensors on the vehicle.

In one particular use of the invention, a wireless sensing and communication system is provided whereby the information or data obtained through processing of input from sensors of the wireless sensing and communication system is further transmitted for reception by a remote facility. Thus, in such a construction, there is an intra-vehicle communications between the sensors on the vehicle and a processing system (control module, computer or the like) and remote communications between the same or a coupled processing system (control module, computer or the like). The electronic components for the intra-vehicle communication may be designed to transmit and receive signals over short distances whereas the electronic components which enable remote communications should be designed to transmit and receive signals over relatively long distances.

The wireless sensing and communication system includes sensors that are located on the vehicle or in the vicinity of the vehicle and which provide information which is transmitted to one or more interrogators in the vehicle by wireless radio frequency means, using wireless radio frequency transmission technology. In some cases, the power to operate a particular sensor is supplied by the interrogator while in other cases, the sensor is independently connected to either a battery, generator (piezo electric, solar etc.), vehicle power source or some source of power external to the vehicle.

One particular system requires mentioning which is the use of high speed satellite or Wi-Fi internet service such as supplied by Wi-Pi hot spots or KVH Industries, Inc. for any and all vehicle communications including vehicle telephone, TV and radio services. With thousands of radio stations available over the internet, for example (see shoutcast.com), a high speed internet connection is clearly superior to satellite radio systems that are now being marketed. Similarly, with ubiquitous internet access that KVH supplies throughout the country, the lack of coverage problems with cell phones disappears. This capability becomes particularly useful for emergency notification when a vehicle has an accident or becomes disabled.

Once a wireless communication system is integrated into a vehicle, it could be used to receive information from remote sites. In the embodiment wherein the vehicle (the pressing unit thereof) is wirelessly communicating with the Internet (using any standard protocol including IEEE 802.xx, WiMax, XMax, Wi-Mobile, etc.), it can be designed to accept transmissions of data and updates for programs resident on the vehicle's processing unit. This bi-directional flow of data can be essentially the same as any bi-directional flow of data over the Internet.

Transmissions of data and updates for programs on the vehicle-resident processing unit or computer can be performed based on the geographical location of the vehicle. That is, the vehicle transmits its location, as determined by a GPS technology for example, to an update server or website and the update server or website commences transmission of the programs updates or data dependent on the vehicle's location (as well as other parameters typical of updating software, such as the current version of the program being updated, the required updates, the optional updates, etc.). In addition to or instead of updating the software on the vehicle-resident processing unit, it is possible to construct the vehicle-resident processing unit to allow for hardware upgrades, i.e., upgradeable processors and memory devices. Such upgrades can be performed by a dealer.

In addition to its use for transferring data between vehicles and remote sites, XMax is useful for transferring information between vehicles, provided the noise rejection is good and sufficiently accommodated for. Information can be transferred indirectly between vehicles using the Internet with each vehicle having a communications system with an identifier and which generates signals to be received by Internet portals. The signals are directed to interested vehicles based on the identifiers of those vehicles. A direct transmission system is also possible wherein the communications system of each vehicle applies the XMax technology to generate signals to be transmitted into the area around the vehicle and received by any

2.2 Docking Stations and PDAs

There is a serious problem developing with vehicles such as cars, trucks, boats and private planes and computer systems. The quality and lifetime of vehicles is increasing and now many vehicles have a lifetime that exceeds ten or more years. On the other hand, computer and related electronic systems, which are proliferating on such vehicles, have shorter and shorter life spans as they are made obsolete by the exponential advances in technology. Owners do not want to dispose of their vehicles just because the electronics have become obsolete. Therefore, a solution as proposed in this invention, whereby a substantial portion of the information, programs, processing power and memory are separate from the vehicle, will increasingly become necessary. One implementation of such a system is for the information, programs, processing power and memory to be resident in a portable device that can be removed from the vehicle. Once removed, the vehicle may still be operable but with reduced functionality. The navigation system, for example, may be resident on the removable device which hereinafter will be referred to as a Personal Information Device (PID) including a GPS subsystem and perhaps an IMU along with appropriate maps allowing a person to navigate on foot as well as in the vehicle. The telephone system which can be either internet or cell phone-based and if internet-based, can be a satellite internet, Wi-Fi or equivalent system which could be equally operable in a vehicle or on foot. The software data and programs can be kept updated including all of the software for diagnostic functions, for example, for the vehicle through the internet connection. The vehicle could contain supplemental displays (such as a heads-up display), input devices including touch pads, switches, voice recognition and cameras for occupant position determination and gesture recognition, and other output devices such as speakers, warning lights etc., for example.

As computer hardware improves it can be an easy step for the owner to replace the PID with the latest version which may even be supplied to the owner under subscription by the Cell Phone Company, car dealership, vehicle manufacturer, computer manufacturer etc. Similarly, the same device can be used to operate the home computer system or entertainment system. In other words, the owner would own one device, the PID, which would contain substantially all of the processing power, software and information that the owner requires to operate his vehicles, computer systems etc. The system can also be periodically backed up (perhaps also over the Internet), automatically providing protection against loss of data in the event of a system failure. The PID can also have a biometrics-based identification system (fingerprint, voiceprint, face or iris recognition etc.) that prevents unauthorized users from using the system and an automatic call back location system based on GPS or other location technologies that permits the owner to immediately find the location of the PID in the event of misplacement or theft.

The PID can also be the repository of credit card information permitting instant purchases without the physical scanning of a separate credit card, home or car door identification system to eliminate keys and conventional keyless entry systems, and other information of a medical nature to aid emergency services in the event of a medical emergency. The possibilities are limitless for such a device. A PID, for example, can be provided with sensors to monitor the vital functions of an elderly person and signal if a problem occurs. The PID can be programmed and provided with sensors to sense fire, cold, harmful chemicals or vapors, biological agents (such as smallpox or anthrax) for use in a vehicle or any other environment. An automatic phone call, or other communication, can be initiated when a hazardous substance (or any other dangerous or hazardous situation or event) is detected to inform the authorities along with the location of the PID. Since the PID would have universal features, it could be taken from vehicle to vehicle allowing each person to have personal features in whatever vehicle he or she was operating. This would be useful for rental vehicles, for example, seats, mirrors, radio stations, HVAC can be automatically set for the PID owner. The same feature can apply to offices, homes, etc.

The same PID can also be used to signal the presence of a particular person in a room and thereby to set the appropriate TV or radio stations, room temperature, lighting, wall pictures etc. For example, the PID could also assume the features of a remote when a person is watching TV. A person could of course have more than one PID and a PID could be used by more than one person provided a means of identification is present such as a biometric based ID or password system. Thus, each individual would need to learn to operate one device, the PID, instead of multiple devices. The PID could even be used to automatically unlock and initiate some action such as opening a door or turning on lights in a vehicle, house, apartment or building. Naturally, the PID can have a variety of associated sensors as discussed above including cameras, microphones, accelerometers, an IMU, GPS receiver, Wi-Fi receiver etc.

Other people could also determine the location of a person carrying the PID, if such a service is authorized by the PID owner. In this manner, parents can locate their children or friends can locate each other in a crowded restaurant or airport. The location or tracking information can be made available on the Internet through the Skybitz or similar low power tracking system. Also, the batteries that operate the PID can be recharged in a variety of ways including fuel cells and vibration-based power generators, solar power, induction charging systems etc. For further background, see N. Tredennick “031201 Go Reconfigure”, IEEE Spectrum Magazine, p. 37-40. December 2003 and D. Verkest “Machine Cameleon” ibid p. 41-46, which describe some of the non-vehicle related properties envisioned here for the PID. Also for some automotive applications see P. Hansen “Portable electronics threaten embedded electronics”, Automotive Industries Magazine, December 2004. Such a device could also rely heavily on whatever network it had access to when it is connected to a network such as the Internet. It could use the connected network for many processing tasks which exceed the capability of the PID or which require information that is not PID-resident. In a sense, the network can become the computer for these more demanding tasks. Using the Internet as the computer gives the automobile companies more control over the software and permits a pricing model based on use rather than a one time sale. Such a device can be based on microprocessors, FPGAs or programmable logical devices or a combination thereof. This is the first disclosure of vehicular uses of such a device to solve the mismatched lifetimes of the vehicle and its electronic hardware and software as discussed above.

When brought into a vehicle, the PID can connect (either by a wire of wirelessly using Bluetooth, Zigbee or 802.11 protocols, for example) to the vehicle system and make use of resident displays, audio systems, antennas and input devices. In this case, the display can be a heads-up display (HUD) and the input devices can be by audio, manual switches, touchpad, joystick, or cameras as disclosed in section 4 and elsewhere herein.

2.3 Satellite and Wi-Fi Internet

Ultimately vehicles will be connected to the Internet with a high speed connection. Such a connection will still be too slow for vehicle-to-vehicle communications for collision avoidance purposes but it should be adequate for most other vehicle communication purposes. Such a system will probably obsolete current cell phone systems and subscriber systems such as OnStar™. Each user can have a single identification number (which could be his or her phone number) which locates his or her address, phone number, current location etc. The vehicle navigation system can guide the vehicle to the location based on the identification number without the need to input the actual address.

The ubiquitous Internet system could be achieved by a fleet of low earth orbiting satellites (LEOs) or transmission towers transmitting and receiving signals based on one of the 802.11 protocols having a radial range of 50 miles, for example. Thus, approximately 500 such towers could cover the continental United States.

A high speed Internet connection can be used for software upgrade downloading and for map downloading as needed. Each vehicle can become a probe vehicle that locates road defects such as potholes, monitors traffic and monitors weather and road conditions. It can also monitor for terrorist activities such as the release of chemical or biological agents as well as provide photographs of anomalies such as traffic accidents, mud slides or fallen trees across the road, etc., any or all of this information can be automatically fed to the appropriate IP address over the Internet providing for ubiquitous information gathering and dissemination. The same or similar system can be available on other vehicles such as planes, trains, boats, trucks etc.

Today, high speed Internet access is available via GEO satellite to vehicles using the KVH system. It is expected that more and more cities will provide citywide internet services via 802.11 systems including Wi-Fi, Wi-Max and Wi-Mobile or their equivalents. Eventually, it is expected that such systems will be available in rural areas thus making the Internet available nationwide and eventually worldwide through one or a combination of satellite and terrestrial systems. Although the KVH system is based on GEO satellites, it is expected that eventually LEO satellites will offer a similar service at a lower price and requiring a smaller antenna. Such an antenna will probably be based on phase array technology.

2.4 Non-Vehicular Applications

The diagnostic and prognostic monitoring techniques and telematics aspects described above could also be used in non-vehicular applications. For example, industrial machinery also commonly includes sensors and other monitoring components which monitor an ongoing process. Applying the invention to such machinery, a processor would be coupled to each sensor and be designed to enable problems with the machinery to be diagnosed or forecast, e.g., using pattern recognition techniques. A communications device would be coupled to the processor and link to the machinery's manufacturer or dealer and provide information about the operability and functionality of the machinery. The manufacturer or dealer would obtain information to enable communications to the operator of the machinery so that when a problem is forecast or occurring, the manufacturer or sealer would be notified via die telecommunications link and in turn, notify the operator to remedy the problem. e.g., take steps to avoid a machinery breakdown.

2.5 Personal Data Storage

As described above, a vehicle designed with a telematics capability will have a vehicle-resident processing unit or computer which communicates with other computers or servers via the Internet. This capability can be used to update programs on the vehicle-resident computer or provide new programs to the vehicle-resident computer.

Another capability which can be performed with the vehicle-resident computer linked to the Internet is to store personal data on an Internet-connected server for the vehicle-resident computer in combination with other computers used by the vehicle owner or operator. Thus, in such a system, there is a central server containing personal data and all of the user's computers, including the vehicle-resident computer, are connected to the server via the Internet. In order for the vehicle-resident computer to access the personal data on the server, a personal identification code would have to be detected while the person is operating or present in the vehicle. This authorization system could be in form a keypad which requires the user to enter a password. Alternatively, the user could be provided with a programmable electronic key which cooperates with a wireless identification and authorization system to allow for the transmission of the personal data from the server to the vehicle-resident computer via the Internet. The identifier may also be a cell phone, PDA or other general purpose device. It could also be a personal RFID device that may be integrated into a key fob used for keyless entry into the vehicle.

2.6 Computation Transfer

When diagnosing the functionality or operability of components on the vehicle in the manner described herein, generally, the data is processed on the vehicle with the end-result of the data processing being transmitted to a remote site. Thus, raw data is processed on the vehicle and an indication of the abnormal operation of a component is transmitted to the remote site.

However, it is also envisioned that in some embodiments, some or all of the data processing is performed at a remote site, which may or may not be the same as the remote site which receives the end-result of the data processing. This minimizes the computer capacity required by the vehicle-resident computer. In this scenario, raw data is transmitted from the vehicle to a remote site, processed at that site to obtain an indication of the operability or functionality of the vehicular components and then either considered at that site or transmitted to another remote site (or even possibly back to the vehicle). Indeed, it is envisioned that data processing now being done by the vehicle-resident computer can be done on a network-resident processor.

3.0 Wiring and Busses

In the discussion above, the diagnostic module of this invention assumes that a vehicle data bus exists which is used by all of the relevant sensors on the vehicle. Most vehicles today do not have a data bus although it is widely believed that most vehicles will have one in the future. In lieu of such a bus, the relevant signals can be transmitted to the diagnostic module through a variety of coupling systems other than through a data bus and this invention is not limited to vehicles having a data bus. For example, the data can be sent wirelessly to the diagnostic module using the Bluetooth™. ZIGBEE or 802.11 or similar specification. In some cases, even the sensors do not have to be wired and can obtain their power via RF from the interrogator as is well known in the RFID radio frequency identification field (either silicon or surface acoustic wave (SAW)-based)). Alternately, an inductive or capacitive power transfer system can be used.

Several technologies have been described above all of which have the objective of improving the reliability and reducing the complexity of the wiring system in an automobile and particularly the safety system. Most importantly, the bus technology described has as its objective simplification and increase in reliability of the vehicle wiring system. The safety system wiring was first conceived of as a method for permitting the location of airbag crash sensors at locations where they can most effectively sense a vehicle crash and yet permit that information to be transmitted to the airbag control circuitry which may be located in a protected portion of the interior of the vehicle or may even be located on the airbag module itself. Protecting this transmission requires a wiring system that is far more reliable and resistant to being destroyed in the very crash that the sensor is sensing. This led to the realization that the data bus that carries the information from the crash sensor must be particularly reliable. Upon designing such a data bus, however, it was found that the capacity of that data bus far exceeded the needs of the crash sensor system. This then led to a realization that the capacity, or bandwidth, of such a bus would be sufficient to carry all of the vehicle information requirements. In some cases, this requires the use of high bandwidth bus technology such as twisted pair wires, shielded twisted pair wires, or coax cable. If a subset of all of the vehicle devices is included on the bus, then the bandwidth requirements are less and simpler bus technologies can be used instead of a coax cable, for example. The economics that accompany a data bus design which has the highest reliability, highest bandwidth, is justified if all of the vehicle devices use the same system. This is where the greatest economics and greatest reliability occur. As described above, this permits, for example, the placement of the airbag firing electronics into or adjacent the housing that contains the airbag inflator. Once the integrity of the data bus is assured, such that it will not be destroyed during the crash itself, then the proper place for the airbag intelligence can be in, or adjacent to, the airbag module itself. This further improves the reliability of the system since the shorting of the wires to the airbag module will not inadvertently set off the airbag as has happened frequently in the past.

When operating on the vehicle data bus, each device should have a unique address. For most situations, therefore, this address must be predetermined and then assigned through an agreed-upon standard for all vehicles. Thus, the left rear tail light must have a unique address so that when the turn signal is turned to flash that light, it does not also flash the right tail light, for example. Similarly, the side impact crash sensor which will operate on the same data bus as the frontal impact crash sensor, must issue a command, directly or indirectly, to the side impact airbag and not to the frontal impact airbag.

One of the key advantages of a single bus system connecting all sensors in the vehicle together is the possibility of using this data bus to diagnose the health of the entire safety system or of the entire vehicle, as described in the detail above. Thus, there are clear synergistic advantages to all the disparate technologies described above.

The design, construction, installation, and maintenance a vehicle data bus network requires attention to many issues, including: an appropriate communication protocol, physical layer transceivers for the selected media, capable microprocessors for application and protocol execution, device controller hardware and software for the required sensors and actuators, etc. Such activities are known to those skilled in the art and will not be described in detail here.

An intelligent distributed system as described above can be based on the CAN Protocol, for example, which is a common protocol used in the automotive industry. CAN is a full function network protocol that provides both message checking and correction to insure communication integrity. Many of the devices on the system will have their own special diagnostics. For instance, an inflator control system can send a warning message if its backup power supply has insufficient charge. In order to assure the integrity and reliability of the bus system, most devices will be equipped with bi-directional communication as described above. Thus, when a message is sent to the rear right taillight to turn on, the light can return a message that it has executed the instruction.

In a refinement of this embodiment, more of the electronics associated with the airbag system can be decentralized and housed within or closely adjacent to each of the airbag modules. Each module can have its own electronic package containing a power supply and diagnostic and sometimes also the occupant sensor electronics. One sensor system is still used to initiate deployment of all airbags associated with the frontal impact. To avoid the noise effects of all airbags deploying at the same time, each module sometimes has its own delay. The modules for the rear seat, for example, can have a several millisecond firing delay compared with the module for the driver and the front passenger module can have a lesser delay. Each of the modules can also have its own occupant position sensor and associated electronics. In this configuration, there is a minimum reliance on the transmission of power and data to and from the vehicle electrical system which is the least reliable part of the airbag system, especially during a crash. Once each of the modules receives a signal from the crash sensor system, it is on its own and no longer needs either power or information from the other parts of the system. The main diagnostics for a module can also reside within the module which transmits either a ready or a fault signal to the main monitoring circuit which now needs only to turn on a warning light, and perhaps record the fault, if any of the modules either fails to transmit a ready signal or sends a fault signal.

Thus, the placement of electronic components in or near the airbag module can be important for safety and reliability reasons. The placement of the occupant sensing as well as the diagnostics electronics within or adjacent to the airbag module has additional advantages to solving several current important airbag problems. For example, there have been numerous inadvertent airbag deployments caused by wires in the system becoming shorted. Then, when the vehicle hits a pothole, which is sufficient to activate an arming sensor or otherwise disturb the sensing system, the airbag can deploy. Such an unwanted deployment of course can directly injure an occupant who is out-of-position or cause an accident resulting in occupant injuries. If the sensor were to send a coded signal to the airbag module rather than a DC voltage with sufficient power to trigger the airbag, and if the airbag module had stored within its electronic circuit sufficient energy to initiate the inflator, then these unwanted deployments could be prevented. A shorted wire cannot send a coded signal and the short can be detected by the module resident diagnostic circuitry.

This would require that the airbag module contain, or have adjacent to it, a power supply (formerly the backup power supply) which further improves the reliability of the system since the electrical connection to the sensor, or to the vehicle power, can now partially fail, as might happen during an accident, and the system will still work properly. It is well known that the electrical resistance in the “clockspring” connection system, which connects the steering wheel-mounted airbag module to the sensor and diagnostic system, has been marginal in design and prone to failure. The resistance of this electrical connection must be very low or there will not be sufficient power to reliably initiate the inflator squib. To reduce the resistance to the level required, high quality gold-plated connectors are preferably used and the wires should also be of unusually high quality. Due to space constraints, however, these wires frequently have only a marginally adequate resistance thereby reducing the reliability of the driver airbag module and increasing its cost. If, on the other hand, the power to initiate the airbag were already in the module, then only a coded signal needs to be sent to the module rather than sufficient power to initiate the inflator. Thus, the resistance problem disappears and the module reliability is increased. Additionally, the requirements for the clockspring wires become less severe and the design can be relaxed reducing the cost and complexity of the device. It may even be possible to return to the slip ring system that existed prior to the implementation of airbags.

Under this system, the power supply can be charged over a few seconds, since the power does not need to be sent to the module at the time of the required airbag deployment because it is already there. Thus, all of the electronics associated with the airbag system except the sensor and its associated electronics, if any, could be within or adjacent to the airbag module. This includes optionally the occupant sensor, the diagnostics and the (backup) power supply, which now becomes the primary power supply, and the need for a backup disappears. When a fault is detected, a message is sent to a display unit located typically in the instrument panel.

The placement of the main electronics within each module follows the development path that computers themselves have followed from a large centralized mainframe base to a network of microcomputers. The computing power required by an occupant position sensor, airbag system diagnostics and backup power supply can be greater than that required by a single point sensor or of a sensor system employing satellite sensors. For this reason, it can be more logical to put this electronic package within or adjacent to each module. In this manner, the advantages of a centralized single point sensor and diagnostic system fade since most of the intelligence will reside within or adjacent to the individual modules and not the centralized system. A simple and more effective CrushSwitch sensor such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,441,301, for example, now becomes more cost effective than the single point sensor and diagnostic system which is now being widely adopted. Finally, this also is consistent with the migration to a bus system where the power and information are transmitted around the vehicle on a single bus system thereby significantly reducing the number of wires and the complexity of the vehicle wiring system. The decision to deploy an airbag is sent to the airbag module subsystem as a signal not as a burst of power. Although it has been assumed that the information would be sent over a wire bus, it is also possible to send the deploy command by a variety of wireless methods either using wires or wirelessly.

Partial implementations of the system just described are depicted schematically in FIGS. 81 and 83 of the '061 application.

The safety bus, or any other vehicle bus, may use a coaxial cable. A connector for joining two coaxial cables is illustrated in FIGS. 70A, 70B, 70C and 70D of the '061 application.

Consider now various uses of a bus system.

3.1 Airbag Systems

The airbag system currently involves a large number of wires that carry information and power to and from the airbag central processing unit. Some vehicles have sensors mounted in the front of the vehicle and many vehicles also have sensors mounted in the side structure (the door, B-Pillar, sill, or any other location that is rigidly connected to the side crush zone of the vehicle). In addition, there are sensors and an electronic control module mounted in the passenger compartment. All cars now have passenger and driver airbags and some vehicles have as many as eight airbags considering the side impact torso airbag and head airbags as well as knee bolster airbags.

To partially cope with this problem, there is a movement to connect all of the safety systems onto a single bus (see for example U.S. Pat. No. 6,326,704). Once again, the biggest problem with the reliability of airbag systems is the wiring and connectors. By practicing the teachings of this invention, one single pair of wires can be used to connect all of the airbag sensors and airbags together and, in one preferred implementation, to do so without the use of connectors. Thus, the reliability of the system is substantially improved and the reduced installation costs more than offsets the added cost of having a loosely coupled inductive network, for example, described elsewhere herein.

With such a system, more and more of the airbag electronics can reside within or adjacent to the airbag module with the crash sensor and occupant information fed to the electronics modules for the deploy decision. Thus, all of the relevant information can reside on the vehicle safety or general bus with each airbag module making its own deploy decision locally.

3.2 Steering Wheel

The steering wheel of an automobile is becoming more complex as more functions are incorporated utilizing switches and/or a touch pad, for example, on the steering wheel or other haptic or non-haptic input or even output devices. Many vehicles have controls for heating and air conditioning, cruise control, radio, etc.

Although previously not implemented, a steering can also be an output device by causing various locations on the steering wheel to provide a vibration, electrical shock or other output to the driver. This is in contrast to vibrating the entire steering wheel which has been proposed for an artificial rumble strip application when a vehicle departs from its lane. Such a local feedback can be used to identify for the driver which button he or she should press to complete an action such as dialing a phone number, for example (see H Kajimoto et al., SmartTouch: Electric Skin to Touch the Untouchable” IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications, pp 36-43, January-February, 2004, IEEE).

Additionally, the airbag must have a very high quality connection so that it reliably deploys even when an accident is underway.

This has resulted in the use of clockspring ribbon cables that make all of the electrical connections between the vehicle and the rotating steering wheel. The ribbon cable must at least able to carry sufficient current to reliably initiate airbag deployment even at very cold temperatures. This requires that the ribbon cable contain at least two heavy conductors to bring power to the airbag. Under the airbag network concept, a capacitor or battery can be used within the airbag module and kept charged thereby significantly reducing the amount of current that must pass through the ribbon cable. Thus, the ribbon cable can be kept considerably smaller, as discussed above.

An alternate and preferred solution uses the teachings of this invention to inductively couple the steering wheel with the vehicle thus eliminating all wires and connectors. All of the switch functions, control functions, and airbag functions are multiplexed on top of the inductive carrier frequency. This greatly simplifies the initial installation of the steering wheel onto the vehicle since a complicated ribbon cable is no longer necessary. Similarly, it reduces warranty repairs caused by people changing steering wheels without making sure that the ribbon cable is properly positioned.

As described elsewhere herein, an input device such as a mouse pad, joy stick or even one or more switches can be placed on the steering wheel and used to control a display such as a heads-up display thus permitting the vehicle operator to control many functions of a vehicle without taking his or her eyes off of the road. BMW recently introduced the IPOD haptic interface which attempts to permit the driver to control many vehicle functions (HVAC, etc.) but it lacks the display feedback and thus has been found confusing to vehicle operators. This problem disappears when such a device is coupled with a display and particularly a heads-up display as taught herein. Although a preferred location for the input device is the steering wheel, it can be placed at other locations in the vehicle as is the IPOD.

The use of a haptic device can be extended to give feedback to the operator. If the phone rings, for example, a particular portion of the steering wheel can be made to vibrate indicating where the operator should depress a switch to answer the phone. The display can also indicate to the driver that the phone is ringing and perhaps indicate to him or her the location of the switch or that a oral command should be given to answer the phone.

3.3 Door Subsystem

More and more electrical functions are also being placed into vehicle doors. This includes window control switches and motors as well as seat control switches, airbag crash sensors, etc. As a result the bundle of wires that must pass through the door edge and through the A-pillar has become a serious assembly and maintenance problem in the automotive industry. Using the teachings of this invention, a loosely coupled inductive system could pass anywhere near the door and an inductive pickup system placed on the other side where it obtains power and exchanges information when the mating surfaces are aligned. If these surfaces are placed in the A-pillar, then sufficient power can be available even when the door is open. Alternately, a battery or capacitive storage system can be provided in the door and the coupling can exist through the doorsill, for example. This eliminates the need for wires to pass through the door interface and greatly simplifies the assembly and installation of doors. It also greatly reduces warranty repairs caused by the constant movement of wires at the door and car body interface.

3.4 Blind Spot Monitor

Many accidents are caused by a driver executing a lane change when there is another vehicle in his blind spot. As a result, several firms are developing blind spot monitors based on radar, optics, or passive infrared, to detect the presence of a vehicle in the driver's blind spot and to warn the driver should he attempt such a lane change. These blind spot monitors are typically placed on the outside of the vehicle near or on the side rear view mirrors. Since the device is exposed to rain, salt, snow etc., there is a reliability problem resulting from the need to seal the sensor and to permit wires to enter the sensor and also the vehicle. Special wire, for example, should be used to prevent water from wicking through the wire. These problems as well as similar problems associated with other devices which require electric power and which are exposed to the environment, such as forward-mounted airbag crash sensors, can be solved utilizing an inductive coupling techniques of this invention.

3.5 Truck-to-Trailer Power and Information Transfer

A serious source of safety and reliability problems results from the flexible wire connections that are necessary between a truck and a trailer. The need for these flexible wire connections and their associated connector problems can be eliminated using the inductive coupling techniques of this invention. In this case, the mere attachment of the trailer to the tractor automatically aligns an inductive pickup device on the trailer with the power lines imbedded in the fifth wheel, for example.

3.6 Wireless Switches

Switches in general do not consume power and therefore they can be implemented wirelessly according to the teachings of this invention in many different modes. For a simple on-off switch, a one bit RFID tag similar to what is commonly used for protecting against shoplifting in stores with a slight modification can be easily implemented. The RFID tag switch would contain its address and a single accessible bit permitting the device to be interrogated regardless of its location in the vehicle without wires. A SAW-based switch as disclosed elsewhere herein can also be used and interrogated wirelessly.

As the switch function becomes more complicated, additional power may be required and the options for interrogation become more limited. For a continuously varying switch, for example the volume control on a radio, it may be desirable to use a more complicated design where an inductive transfer of information is utilized. On the other hand, by using momentary contact switches that would set the one bit on only while the switch is activated and by using the duration of activation, volume control type functions can still be performed even though the switch is remote from the interrogator.

This concept then permits the placement of switches at arbitrary locations anywhere in the vehicle without regard to the placement of wires. Additionally, multiple switches can be easily used to control the same device or a single switch can control many devices.

For example, a switch to control the forward and rearward motion of the driver seat can be placed on the driver door-mounted armrest and interrogated by an RFID reader or SAW interrogator located in the headliner of the vehicle. The interrogator periodically monitors all RFID or SAW switches located in the vehicle which may number over 100. If the driver armrest switch is depressed and the switch bit is changed from 0 to 1, the reader knows based on the address or identification number of the switch that the driver intends to operate his seat in a forward or reverse manner. A signal can then be sent over the inductive power transfer line to the motor controlling the seat and the motor can thus be commanded to move the seat either forward based on one switch ID or backward based on another switch ID. Thus, the switch in the armrest could actually contain two identification RFIDs or SAW switches, one for forward movement of seat and one for rearward movement of the seat. As soon the driver ceases operating the switch, the switch state returns to 0 and a command is sent to the motor to stop moving the seat. The RFID or SAW device can be passive or active.

By this process as taught by this invention, all of the 100 or so switches and other simple sensors can become wireless devices and vastly reduce the number of wires in a vehicle and increase the reliability and reduce warranty repairs. One such example is the switch that determines whether the seatbelt is fastened which can now be a wireless switch.

3.7 Wireless Lights

In contrast to switches, lights require power. The power required generally exceeds that which can be easily transmitted by RF or capacitive coupling. For lights to become wireless, therefore, inductive coupling or equivalent can be required. Now, however, it is no longer necessary to have light sockets, wires and connectors. Each light bulb could be outfitted with an inductive pickup device and a microprocessor. The microprocessor can listen to the information coming over the inductive pickup line, or wirelessly, and when it recognizes its address, it activates an internal switch which turns on the light. If the information is transferred wirelessly, the RFID switch described in section 1.4.4 above can be used. The light bulb becomes a totally sealed, self-contained unit with no electrical connectors or connections to the vehicle. It is automatically connected by mounting in a holder and by its proximity, which can be as far away as several inches, to the inductive power line. It has been demonstrated that power transfer efficiencies of up to about 99 percent can be achieved by this system and power levels exceeding about 1 kW can be transferred to a device using a loosely coupled inductive system described above.

This invention therefore considerably simplifies the mounting of lights in a vehicle since the lights are totally self-contained and not plugged into the vehicle power system. Problems associated with sealing the light socket from the environment disappear vastly simplifying the installation of headlights, for example, into the vehicle. The skin of the vehicle need not contain any receptacles for a light plug and therefore there is no need to seal the light bulb edges to prevent water from entering behind the light bulb. Thus, the reliability of vehicle exterior lighting systems is significantly improved. Similarly, the ease with which light bulbs can be changed when they burn out is greatly simplified since the complicated mechanisms for sealing the light bulb into the vehicle are no longer necessary. Although headlights were discussed, the same principles apply to all other lights mounted on a vehicle exterior.

Since it is contemplated that the main power transfer wire pair will travel throughout the automobile in a single branched loop, several light bulbs can be inductively attached to the inductive wire power supplier by merely locating a holder for the sealed light bulb within a few inches of the wire. Once again, no electrical connections are required.

Consider for example the activation of the right turn signal. The microprocessor associated with the turn switch on the steering column is programmed to transmit the addresses of the right front and rear turn light bulbs to turn them on. A fraction of a second later, the microprocessor sends a signal over the inductive power transfer line, or wirelessly, to turn the light bulbs off. This is repeated for as long as the turn signal switch is placed in the activation position for a right turn. The right rear turn signal light bulb receives a message with its address and a bit set for the light to be turned on and it responds by so doing and similarly, when the signal is received for turning the light off. Once again, all such transmissions occur over a single power and information inductive line and no wire connections are made to the light bulb. In this example, all power and information is transferred inductively.

3.8 Keyless Entry

The RFID technology is particularly applicable to keyless entry. Instead of depressing a button on a remote vehicle door opener, the owner of vehicle need only carry an RFID card in his pocket. Upon approaching the vehicle door, the reader located in the vehicle door, activates the circuitry in the RFID card and receives the identification number, checks it and unlocks the vehicle if the code matches. It can even open the door or trunk based on the time that the driver stands near the door or trunk. Simultaneously, the vehicle now knows that this is driver No. 3, for example, and automatically sets the seat position, headrest position, mirror position, radio stations, temperature controls and all other driver specific functions including the positions of the petals to adapt the vehicle to the particular driver. When the driver sits in the seat, no ignition key is necessary and by merely depressing a switch which can be located anywhere in the vehicle, on the armrest for example, the vehicle motor starts. The switch can be wireless and the reader or interrogator which initially read the operator's card can be connected inductively to the vehicle power system.

U.S. Pat. No. 5,790,043 describes the unlocking of a door based on a transponder held by a person approaching the door. By adding the function of measuring the distance to the person, by use of the backscatter from the transponder antenna for example, the distance from the vehicle-based transmitter and the person can be determined and the door opened when the person is within 5 feet, for example, of the door as discussed elsewhere herein.

Using the RFID switch discussed above, for example, the integration of the keyless entry system with the tire monitor and all other similar devices can be readily achieved.

3.9 In-Vehicle Mesh Network, Intra-Vehicle Communications

The use of wireless networks within a vehicle has been discussed elsewhere herein. Of particular interest here is the use of a mesh network (or mesh) wherein the various wireless elements are connected via a mesh such that each device can communicate with each other to thereby add information that might aid a particular node. In the simplest case, nodes on the mesh can merely aid in the transfer of information to a central controller. In more advanced cases, the temperature monitored by one node can be used by other nodes to compensate for the effects of temperature on the node operation. In another case, the fact that a node has been damaged or is experiencing acceleration can be used to determine the extent of and to forecast the severity of an accident. Such a mesh network can operate in the discrete frequency or in the ultra wideband mode.

3.10 Road Conditioning Sensing—Black Ice Warning

A frequent cause of accidents is the sudden freezing of roadways or bridge surfaces when the roadway is wet and temperatures are near freezing. Sensors exist that can detect the temperature of the road surface within less than one degree either by direct measurement or by passive IR. These sensors can be mounted in locations on the vehicle where they have a clear view of the road and thus they are susceptible to assault from rain, snow, ice, salt etc. The reliability of connecting these sensors into the vehicle power and information system is thus compromised. Using the teachings of this invention, black ice warning sensors, for example, can be mounted on the exterior of the vehicle and coupled into the vehicle power and information system inductively, thus removing a significant cause of failure of such sensors. Also the use of appropriate cameras and sensors along with multispectral analysis of road surfaces can be particularly useful to discover icing.

Similar sensors can also used to detect the type of roadway on which the car is traveling. Gravel roads, for example, have typically a lower effective coefficient of friction than do concrete roads. Knowledge of the road characteristics can provide useful information to the vehicle control system and, for example, warn the driver when the speed driven is above what is safe for the road conditions, including the particular type of roadway.

3.11 Antennas Including Steerable Antennas

As discussed above, the antennas used in the systems disclosed herein can contribute significantly to the operation of the systems. In one case, a silicon or gallium arsenide (for higher frequencies) element can be placed at an antenna to process the returned signal as needed. High gain antennas such as the yagi antenna or steerable antennas such as electronically controllable (or tunable) dielectric constant phased array antennas are also contemplated. For steerable antennas, reference is made to U.S. Pat. No. 6,452,565 “Steerable-beam multiple-feed dielectric resonator antenna”. Also contemplated, in addition to those discussed above, are variable slot antennas and Rotman lenses. All of these plus other technologies go under the heading of smart antennas and all such antennas are contemplated herein.

The antenna situation can be improved as the frequency increases. Currently. SAW devices are difficult to make that operate much above about 2.4 GHz. It is expected that as lithography systems improve that eventually these devices will be made to operate in the higher GHz range permitting the use of antennas that are even more directional.

3.12 Other Miscellaneous Sensors

Many new sensors are now being adapted to an automobile to increase the safety, comfort and convenience of vehicle occupants. Each of the sensors currently requires separate wiring for power and information transfer. Under the teachings of this invention, these separate wires can become unnecessary and sensors could be added at will to the automobile at any location within a few inches of the inductive power line system or, in some cases, within range of an RF interrogator. Even sensors that were not contemplated by the vehicle manufacturer can be added later with a software change to the appropriate vehicle CPU as discussed above.

Such sensors include heat load sensors that measure the sunlight coming in through the windshield and adjust the environmental conditions inside the vehicle or darken the windshield to compensate. Seatbelt sensors that indicate that the seatbelt is buckled and the tension or acceleration experienced by the seatbelt can now also use RFID and/or SAW technology as can low power microphones. Door-open or door-ajar sensors also can use the RFID and/or SAW technology and would not need to be placed near an inductive power line. Gas tank fuel level and other fluid level sensors which do not require external power and are now possible thus eliminating any hazard of sparks igniting the fuel in the case of a rear impact accident which ruptures the fuel tank, for example.

Capacitive proximity sensors that measure the presence of a life form within a few meters of the automobile can be coupled wirelessly to the vehicle. Cameras or other vision or radar or lidar sensors that can be mounted external to the vehicle and not require unreliable electrical connections to the vehicle power system permitting such sensors to be totally sealed from the environment are also now possible. Such sensors can be based on millimeter wave radar, passive or active infrared, or optical or any other portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that is suitable for the task. Radar, passive sound or ultrasonic backup sensors or rear impact anticipatory sensors also are now feasible with significantly greater reliability.

The use of passive audio requires additional discussion. One or more directional microphones aimed from the rear of the vehicle can determine from tire-produced audio signals, for example, that a vehicle is approaching and might impact the target vehicle which contains the system. The target vehicle's tires as well as those to the side of the target vehicle will also produce sounds which need to be cancelled out of the sound from the directional microphones using well-known noise cancellation techniques. By monitoring the intensity of the sound in comparison with the intensity of the sound from the target vehicle's own tires, a determination of the approximate distance between the two vehicles can be made. Finally, a measurement of the rate of change in sound intensity can be used to estimate the time to collision. This information can then be used to pre-position the headrest, for example, or other restraint device to prepare the occupants of the target vehicle for the rear end impact and thus reduce the injuries therefrom. A similar system can be used to forecast impacts from other directions. In some cases, the microphones will need to be protected in a manner so as to reduce noise from the wind such as with a foam protection layer. This system provides a very inexpensive anticipatory crash system.

Previously, the use of radio frequency to interrogate an RFID tag has been discussed. Other forms of electromagnetic radiation are possible. For example, an infrared source can illuminate an area inside the vehicle and a pin diode or CMOS camera can receive reflections from corner cube or dihedral corner (as more fully descried below) reflectors located on objects that move within the vehicle. These objects would include items such as the seat, seatback, and headrest. Through this technique, the time of flight, by pulse or phase lock loop technologies, can be measured or modulated IR radiation and phase measurements can be used to determine the distance to each of the corner cube or dihedral corner reflectors.

The above discussion has concentrated on applications primarily inside of the vehicle (although mention is often made of exterior monitoring applications). There are also a significant number of applications concerning the interaction of a vehicle with its environment. Although this might be construed as a deviation from the primary premise of this invention, which is that the device is either powerless in the sense that no power is required other than perhaps that which can be obtained from a radio frequency signal or a powered device and where the power is obtained through induction coupling, it is encompassed within the invention.

When looking exterior to the vehicle, devices that interact with the vehicle may be located sufficiently far away that they will require power and that power cannot be obtained from the automobile. In the discussion below, two types of such devices will be considered, the first type which does not require infrastructure-supplied power and the second which does.

A rule of thumb is that an RFID tag of normal size that is located more than about a meter away from the reader or interrogator must have an internal power source. Exceptions to this involve cases where the only information that is transferred is due to the reflection off of a radar reflector-type device and for cases where the tag is physically larger. For those cases, a purely passive RFID can be five and sometimes more meters away from the interrogator. Nevertheless, we shall assume that if the device is more than a few meters away that the device must contain some kind of power supply.

An interesting application is a low-cost form of adaptive cruise control or forward collision avoidance system. In this case, a purely passive RFID tag could be placed on every rear license plate in a particular geographical area, such as a state. The subject vehicle would contain two readers, one on the forward left side of the vehicle and one on the forward right side. Upon approaching the rear of a car having the RFID license plate, the interrogators in the vehicle would be able to determine the distance, by way of reflected signal time of flight, from each reader to the license plate transducer. If the license plate RFID is passive, then the range is limited to about 5 meters depending on the size of the tag. Nevertheless, this will be sufficient to determine that there is a vehicle in front of or to the right or left side of the subject vehicle. If the relative velocity of the two vehicles is such that a collision will occur, the subject vehicle can automatically have its speed altered so as to prevent the collision, typically a rear end collision. Alternately, the front of the vehicle can have two spaced-apart tags in which case, a single interrogator could suffice.

An explanation is found in the parent '240 application and this innovation leads to a novel addition or substitution to putting an RFID tag onto a license plate is to emboss the license plate or otherwise attach to it or elsewhere on the vehicle a corner cube or dihedral corner reflector which can yield a bright reflection from a radar or ladar (laser radar) transmitter from a following vehicle, for example. Further, the reflector can be designed to rotate the polarization of a bean by 90 degrees, thus the potential problem of the receiver being blinded by another vehicle's system is reduced. Additionally, a reflector can be designed as described above to reflect a polarized beam from a non-polarized beam or better to rotate a polarized beam through an arbitrary angle. In this manner, some information about the vehicle such as its mass class can be conveyed to the interrogating vehicle. A polarization on only 0 degrees can signify a passenger car, only 90 degrees an SUV or other large passenger vehicle or pickup truck. 45 degrees a small truck, both 0 and 45 degrees (using two reflectors) a larger truck, 45 and 90 degrees a larger truck etc. yielding 7 or more classifications. Thus using a very low cost reflector, a great deal of information can be conveyed including the range to the vehicle based on time-of-flight or phase angle comparison if the transmitted beam is modulated. Noise or pseudo-noise modulated radar would also be applicable as a modulation based system for distance measurement.

Additions to an RFID-based system that can be used alone or along with the reflector system discussed above include the addition of an energy harvesting system such as solar power or power from vibrations. Thus the tag can start out as a pure passive tag providing up to about 10 meters range and grow to an active tag providing a 30 or more meter range. With the use of RFID, a great deal of additional information can be transmitted such as the vehicle weight, license plate number, tolling ID etc. Once a tire pressure interrogator as discussed above is on the vehicle, the cost to add one or more license plate interrogating antennas is small and the cost addition to a license plate can be as low as 1-5 US dollars. Since no electrical connection need be made to the vehicle, the installation cost is no more than for an ordinary license plate.

An alternate approach is to visually scan license plates using an imager such as a camera. An infrared imager and a source of infrared illumination can be used. Using such a system, the characters (numbers and letters) can be read and if the license plate-issuing authority has coded the properties (type of vehicle, weight, etc.) into these characters, a vehicle can identify those properties of a vehicle that it may soon impact and that information can be a factor in the vehicle control algorithm or restraint deployment decision.

Systems are under development that will permit an automobile to determine its absolute location on the surface of the earth. These systems are being developed in conjunction with intelligent transportation systems. Such location systems are frequently based on differential GPS (DGPS). One problem with such systems is that the appropriate number of GPS satellites is not always within view of the automobile. For such cases, it is necessary to have an earth-based system which will provide the information to the vehicle permitting it to absolutely locate itself within a few centimeters. One such system can involve the use of RFID tags placed above, adjacent or below the surface of the highway.

For the cases where the RFID tags are located more than a few meters from the vehicle, a battery or other poser source will probably be required and this will be discussed below. For the systems without batteries, such as placing the RFID tag in the concrete, with two readers located one on each side of the vehicle, the location of the tag embedded in the concrete can be precisely determine based on the time of flight of the radar pulse from the readers to the tag and back. Using this method, the precise location of the vehicle relative to a tag within a few centimeters can be readily determined and since the position of the tag will be absolutely known by virtue of an in-vehicle resident digital map, the position of the vehicle can be absolutely determined regardless of where the vehicle is. For example, if the vehicle is in a tunnel, then it will know precisely its location from the RFID pavement embedded tags. Note that the polarization rotation reflector discussed above will also perform this task excellently.

It is also possible to determine the relative velocity of the vehicle relative to the RFID tag or reflector using the Doppler Effect based on the reflected signals. For tags located on license plates or elsewhere on the rear of vehicles, the closing velocity of the two vehicles can be determined and for tags located in or adjacent to the highway pavement, the velocity of the vehicle can be readily determined. The velocity can in both cases be determined based on differentiating two distance measurements.

In many cases, it may be necessary to provide power to the RFID tag since the distance to the vehicle will exceed a few meters. This is currently being used in reverse for automatic tolling situations where the RFID tag is located on the vehicle and interrogated using readers located at the toll both.

When the RFID tag to be interrogated by vehicle-mounted readers is more than a few meters from the vehicle, the tag in many cases must be supplied with power. This power can come from a variety of sources including a battery which is part of the device, direct electrical connections to a ground wire system, solar batteries, generators that generate power from vehicle or component vibration, other forms of energy harvesting or inductive energy transfer from a power line.

For example, if an RFID tag were to be placed on a light post in downtown Manhattan, sufficient energy could be obtained from an inductive pickup from the wires used to power the light to recharge a battery in the RFID. Thus, when the lights are turned on at night, the RFID battery could be recharged sufficiently to provide power for operation 24 hours a day. In other cases, a battery or ultracapacitor could be included in the device and replacement or recharge of the battery would be necessitated periodically, perhaps once every two years.

An alternate approach to having a vehicle transmit a pulse to the tag and wait for a response, would be to have the tag periodically broadcast a few waves of information at precise timing increments. Then, the vehicle with two receivers could locate itself accurately relative to the earth-based transmitter.

For example, in downtown Manhattan, it would be difficult to obtain information from satellites that are constantly blocked by tall buildings. Nevertheless, inexpensive transmitters could be placed on a variety of lampposts that would periodically transmit a pulse to all vehicles in the vicinity. Such a system could be based on a broadband micropower impulse radar system as disclosed in several U.S. patents. Alternately, a narrow band signal can be used.

Once again, although radar type microwave pulses have been discussed, other portions of the electromagnetic spectrum can be utilized. For example, a vehicle could send a beam of modulated infrared toward infrastructure-based devices such as poles which contain corner or polarization modifying reflectors. The time of flight of IR radiation from the vehicle to the reflectors can be accurately measured and since the vehicle would know, based on accurate maps, where the reflector is located, there is the little opportunity for an error.

The invention is also concerned with wireless devices that contain transducers. An example is a temperature transducer coupled with appropriate circuitry which is capable of receiving power either inductively or through radio frequency energy transfer or even, and some cases, capacitively. Such temperature transducers may be used to measure the temperature inside the passenger compartment or outside of the vehicle. They also can be used to measure the temperature of some component in the vehicle, e.g., the tire. A distinctive feature of some embodiments of this invention is that such temperature transducers are not hard-wired into the vehicle and do not rely solely on batteries. Such temperature sensors have been used in other environments such as the monitoring of the temperature of domestic and farm animals for health monitoring purposes.

Upon receiving power inductively or through the radio frequency energy transfer, the temperature transducer conducts its temperature measurement and transmits the detected temperature to a process or central control module in the vehicle.

The wireless communication within a vehicle can be accomplished in several ways. The communication can be through the same path that supplies power to the device, or it can involve the transmission of waves that are received by another device in the vehicle. These waves can be either electromagnetic (radio frequency, microwave, infrared, etc) or ultrasonic. If electromagnetic, they can be sent using a variety of protocols such as CDMA, FDMA, TDMA or ultrawideband (see, e.g., Hiawatha Bray, “The next big thing is actually ultrawide”, Boston Globe, Jun. 25, 2004).

Many other types of transducers or sensors can be used in this manner. The distance to an object from a vehicle can be measured using a radar reflector type RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) tag which permits the distance to the tag to be determined by the time of flight of radio waves. Another method of determining distance to an object can be through the use of ultrasound wherein the device is commanded to emit an ultrasonic burst and the time required for the waves to travel to a receiver is an indication of the displacement of the device from the receiver.

Although in most cases the communication will take place within the vehicle, and some cases such as external temperature transducers or tire pressure transducers, the source of transmission will be located outside of the compartment of the vehicle.

A discussion of RFID technology including its use for distance measurement is included in the RFID Handbook, by Klaus Finkenzeller, John Wiley & Sons, New York 1999.

In one simple form, the invention can involve a single transducer and system for providing power and receiving information. An example of such a device would be an exterior temperature monitor which is placed outside of the vehicle and receives its power and transmits its information through the windshield glass. At the other extreme, a pair of parallel wires carrying high frequency alternating current can travel to all parts of the vehicle where electric power is needed. In this case, every device could be located within a few inches of this wire pair and through an appropriately designed inductive pickup system, each device receives the power for operation inductively from the wire pair. A system of this type which is designed for use in powering vehicles is described in several U.S. patents listed above.

In this case, all sensors and actuators on the vehicle can be powered by the inductive power transfer system. The communication with these devices could either be over the same system or, alternately, could be take place via RF, ultrasound, infrared or other similar communication system. If the communication takes place either by RF or over a modulated wire system, a protocol such as the Bluetooth™ or Zigbee protocol can be used. Other options include the Ethernet and token ring protocols.

The above system technology is frequently referred to as loosely coupled inductive systems. Such systems have been used for powering a vehicle down a track or roadway but have not been used within the vehicle. The loosely coupled inductive system makes use of high frequency (typically 10,000 Hz) and resonant circuits to achieve a power transfer approaching 99 percent efficiency. The resonant system is driven using a switching amplifier. As discussed herein, this is believed to be the first example of a high frequency power system for use within vehicles.

Every device that utilizes the loosely coupled inductive system would contain a microprocessor and thus would be considered a smart device. This includes every light, switch, motor, transducer, sensor etc. Each device could have an address and would respond only to information containing its address.

It is now contemplated that the power systems for next generation automobiles and trucks will change from the current standard of 12 volts to a new standard of 42 volts. The power generator or alternator in such vehicles will produce alternating current and thus will be compatible with the system described herein wherein all power within the vehicle will be transmitted using AC.

It is contemplated that some devices will require more power than can be obtained instantaneously from the inductive, capacitive or radio frequency source. In such cases, batteries, capacitors or ultra-capacitors may be used directly associated with a particular device to handle peak power requirements. Such a system can also be used when the device is safety critical and there is a danger of disruption of the power supply during a vehicle crash, for example. In general, the battery or capacitor would be charged when the device is not being powered.

In some cases, the sensing device may be purely passive and require no power. One such example is when an infrared or optical beam of energy is reflected off of a passive reflector to determine the distance to that reflector. Another example is a passive reflective RFID tag.

As noted above, several U.S. patents describe arrangements for monitoring the pressure inside a rotating tire and to transmit this information to a display inside the vehicle. A preferred approach for monitoring the pressure within a tire is to instead monitor the temperature of the tire using a temperature sensor and associated power supplying circuitry as discussed above and to compare that temperature to the temperature of other tires on the vehicle, as discussed above. When the pressure within a tire decreases, this generally results in the tire temperature rising if the vehicle load is being carried by that tire. In the case where two tires are operating together at the same location such as on a truck trailer, just the opposite occurs. That is, the temperature of the fully inflated tire can increase since it is now carrying more load than the partially inflated tire.

4. Summary

As stated at the beginning this application is one in a series of applications covering safety and other systems for vehicles and other uses. The disclosure herein goes beyond that needed to support the claims of the particular invention that is being claimed herein. This is not to be construed that the inventor is releasing the unclaimed disclosure and subject matter into the public domain. Rather, it is intended that patent applications have been or will be filed to cover all of the subject matter disclosed above.

The inventions described above are, of course, susceptible to many variations, combinations of disclosed components, modifications and changes, all of which are within the skill of the art. It should be understood that all such variations, modifications and changes are within the spirit and scope of the inventions and of the appended claims. Similarly, it will be understood that applicant intends to cover and claim all changes, modifications and variations of the examples of the preferred embodiments of the invention herein disclosed for the purpose of illustration which do not constitute departures from the spirit and scope of the present invention as claimed.

Although several preferred embodiments are illustrated and described above, there are possible combinations using other geometries, sensors, materials and different dimensions for the components that perform the same functions. This invention is not limited to the above embodiments and should be determined by the following claims. 

The invention claimed is:
 1. A vehicle, comprising: a wireless device configured to wirelessly detect a wireless vehicle entry device within the vehicle; and after detecting the wireless vehicle entry device within the vehicle, wirelessly detect an actuation of a switch that starts an engine of the vehicle, wherein the vehicle is configured to automatically set a position of a seat of the vehicle according to the wireless vehicle entry device after the wireless device wirelessly detects the wireless vehicle entry device within the vehicle.
 2. The vehicle of claim 1, wherein the wireless vehicle entry device is a radio-frequency identification (RFID) device.
 3. The vehicle of claim 1, wherein the vehicle is further configured to automatically set one or more of a position of a headrest of the vehicle, a position of a mirror of the vehicle, a position of a pedal of the vehicle, a setting of a radio station of the vehicle, and a setting of a temperature control of the vehicle, according to the wireless vehicle entry device after the wireless device wirelessly detects the wireless vehicle entry device within the vehicle and the actuation of the switch that starts the engine of the vehicle.
 4. The vehicle of claim 1, wherein the wireless device is configured to detect the wireless vehicle entry device as the wireless vehicle entry device approaches the vehicle.
 5. The vehicle of claim 4, wherein the vehicle is configured to unlock one or more doors of the vehicle after the wireless device detects the wireless vehicle entry device approaching the vehicle.
 6. The vehicle of claim 1, wherein the wireless device is configured to detect the wireless vehicle entry device as the wireless vehicle entry device moves away from the vehicle.
 7. The vehicle of claim 6, wherein the vehicle is configured to lock one or more doors of the vehicle after the wireless device detects the wireless vehicle entry device moving away from the vehicle.
 8. The vehicle of claim 1, wherein the vehicle is configured to automatically lock one or more doors when the vehicle is placed in gear.
 9. The vehicle of claim 1, wherein the vehicle is configured to automatically set the respective positions of the seat of the vehicle according to each of a plurality of wireless vehicle entry devices.
 10. The vehicle of claim 9, wherein different wireless vehicle entry devices cause the vehicle to automatically set the seat in different positions.
 11. The vehicle of claim 1, wherein the wireless device is configured to receive identification information from the wireless vehicle entry device and from another wireless vehicle entry device to distinguish the wireless vehicle entry device from the another wireless vehicle entry device.
 12. The vehicle of claim 2, wherein the wireless vehicle entry device is part of or includes one or more of an RFID tag, a smart card, and a cellular device.
 13. The vehicle of claim 1, wherein the wireless vehicle entry device is part of or includes one or more of an RFID tag, a smart card, and a cellular device.
 14. The vehicle of claim 1, wherein the wireless device is configured to determine a proximity of the wireless vehicle entry device to the vehicle.
 15. The vehicle of claim 1, wherein the switch comprises a wireless switch.
 16. The vehicle of claim 1, wherein a key fob comprises the wireless vehicle entry device.
 17. A vehicle, comprising: a wireless device configured to wirelessly detect a wireless vehicle entry device within the vehicle, wherein the vehicle is configured to automatically set a position of a seat of the vehicle according to the wireless vehicle entry device after the wireless device wirelessly detects the wireless vehicle entry device within the vehicle.
 18. The vehicle of claim 17, wherein the wireless vehicle entry device is a radio-frequency identification (RFID) device.
 19. The vehicle of claim 17, wherein the vehicle is configured to automatically set one or more of a position of a headrest of the vehicle, a position of a mirror of the vehicle, a position of a pedal of the vehicle, a setting of a radio station of the vehicle, and a setting of a temperature control of the vehicle, according to the wireless vehicle entry device after the wireless device wirelessly detects the wireless vehicle entry device within the vehicle.
 20. The vehicle of claim 17, wherein the wireless vehicle entry device is an RFID device, and wherein the vehicle automatically sets one or more of a respective position of a headrest of the vehicle, a respective position of a mirror of the vehicle, a respective position of a pedal of the vehicle, a respective setting of a radio station of the vehicle, and a respective setting of a temperature control of the vehicle, according to the corresponding identification information after the wireless device wirelessly detects the wireless vehicle entry device within the vehicle.
 21. The vehicle of claim 17, wherein the wireless device is configured to detect the wireless vehicle entry device as the wireless vehicle entry device approaches the vehicle.
 22. The vehicle of claim 21, wherein the vehicle is configured to unlock one or more doors of the vehicle after the wireless device detects the wireless vehicle entry device approaching the vehicle.
 23. The vehicle of claim 17, wherein the wireless device is configured to detect the wireless vehicle entry device as the wireless vehicle entry device moves away from the vehicle.
 24. The vehicle of claim 23, wherein the vehicle is configured to lock one or more doors of the vehicle after the wireless device detects the wireless vehicle entry device moving away from the vehicle.
 25. The vehicle of claim 17, wherein the vehicle is configured to automatically lock one or more doors when the vehicle is placed in gear.
 26. The vehicle of claim 17, wherein the vehicle is configured to automatically set the respective positions of the seat of the vehicle according to each of a plurality of wireless vehicle entry devices.
 27. The vehicle of claim 26, wherein different wireless vehicle entry devices cause the vehicle to automatically set the seat in different positions.
 28. The vehicle of claim 17, wherein the wireless device is configured to receive identification information from the wireless vehicle entry device and from another wireless vehicle entry device to distinguish the wireless vehicle entry device from the another wireless vehicle entry device.
 29. The vehicle of claim 18, wherein the wireless vehicle entry device is part of or includes one or more of an RFID tag, a smart card, and a cellular device.
 30. The vehicle of claim 17, wherein the wireless vehicle entry device is part of or includes one or more of an RFID tag, a smart card, and a cellular device.
 31. The vehicle of claim 17, wherein the wireless device is configured to determine a proximity of the wireless vehicle entry device to the vehicle.
 32. The vehicle of claim 17, wherein a key fob comprises the wireless vehicle entry device. 